News, 20 June 2002
Prominent members of SPUC began a nine-day water-only fast today to
draw attention to the true nature of the abortifacient morning-after
pill and raise funds for the continuing campaign against it. Paul
Tully, the general secretary, and William Jolliffe, a member of the
national executive committee, are among those fasting for the whole
period. Other SPUC members and supporters are showing their support by
fasting for some of the time, such as Catherine Butchers, a 26-year-old
London lawyer, who is fasting for five of the days. She said: "I
strongly believe that the availability of the abortion-inducing
morning-after pill is scandalous and shameful. I am participating in
this fast to demonstrate my support for SPUC's campaign and my respect
for the fundamental dignity of early human life." [SPUC, 20 June]
An opponent of abortion has been tipped to become the next
archbishop of Canterbury. It is reported that Dr Rowan Williams,
currently the Anglican archbishop of Wales, is the first choice of the
Crown Appointments Commission. The final decision on who will succeed
Dr George Carey as figurehead of the worldwide Anglican (Episcopal)
communion will be made by Tony Blair, the British prime minister, whose
decision will then be approved by Queen Elizabeth II. Although Dr
Williams is known to be permissive in many ways, he has described his
views on abortion as "ultra-conservative" and has condemned the
morning-after pill as a form of abortion. [
The Times, 20 June;
Southern Cross online, August 2001;
Daily Telegraph, 10 January 2001]
The lower house of the Italian parliament yesterday passed government
legislation which would ban all embryo experimentation and the freezing
of embryos [see
digest for 13 June].
Members of the Chamber of Deputies approved the bill by 268 votes to
144, although it is thought that it will face more opposition in the
Senate. [
LifeSite, 19 June]
A member of the US House of Representatives re-introduced a measure to
ban partial-birth abortions yesterday. The legislation introduced by
Rep. Steve Chabot (the Republican chairman of the House Judiciary
Committee's constitution subcommittee) has been condemned by
pro-abortionists. The National Abortion Federation declared that the
law would "threaten the health of American women". [
US Newswire, 19 June, and
US Newswire, 19 June]
A health board in Kentucky has narrowly decided against a proposal to
refuse federal money for birth control pills on the basis that they can
cause early abortions [see
digest for 30 May].
Members of the Northern Kentucky Independent District Health Board were
tied 13 to 13 last night on the proposal to refuse federal Title-X
funding for birth control, but the board's chairman used his casting
vote to reject the proposal. The vote had been viewed closely by both
pro-lifers and pro-abortionists across the United States. [EWTN News,
19 June; AP, via Guardian Unlimited, 20 June]
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2012