News, 18 June 2002
The abortifacient morning-after pill is to be supplied free of charge
to children in Exeter, south-west England. The scheme, which is being
organised by the North and East Devon NHS authority in conjunction with
Devon County Council, involves the provision of morning-after pills
from pharmacists and school nurses to teenagers, including those under
16, without the knowledge or consent of parents. £75,000 of public
money will be spent on the scheme, which is intended to combat Exeter's
increasing teenage pregnancy rate. [
Express and Echo, 17 June]
There is no proof that the easy availability of so-called emergency
contraception reduces the teenage pregnancy rate; indeed, it may
encourage sexually irresponsible behaviour and abuse. Tens of thousands
of unborn children are killed by the morning-after pill in the UK each
year.
The chief executive of Tesco has refused to make any comments on
the controversy surrounding the provision of abortifacient
morning-after pills from Tesco supermarkets. A spokesman for Sir Terry
Leahy, who is a Catholic, said that he had no plans either to make a
statement or to take any action on the subject. Meanwhile, a community
of Franciscan friars in Woodford Green, Essex, have sold their
investment of £50,000 in Tesco shares in protest at the supermarket
chain's involvement in the provision of abortion-inducing drugs. [
The Universe, 16 June]
It is reported that the one millionth baby conceived by in vitro
fertilisation (IVF) has been born. The milestone was revealed during
events to mark World Infertility Month in New Zealand. A spokesman for
SPUC commented: "The first IVF child to be born was Louise Brown in
1978, since when tens of millions of IVF babies have perished in a
process which puts early unborn lives at an enormously disproportionate
risk of death. One expert (Dr E L Billings, 1999) has suggested that
only 1.7 percent of conceptions generated by IVF treatment result in a
live birth. Millions of IVF babies who are kept in cold storage around
the world are now seen by many as convenient objects for destructive
stem cell research. The advent of IVF has led to a commodification of
human life to a quite horrifying extent." [
LifeSite, 17 June; SPUC, 18 June]
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