News, 14 March 2002
The Court of Appeal in London ruled this morning that the BBC and other
British television broadcasters were wrong to refuse to screen an
election broadcast prepared by the Pro-Life Alliance, a British
pro-life political party, which featured graphic depictions of
abortions. The High Court had ruled in favour of the broadcasters, who
refused to screen the film before the 1997 and 2001 UK general
elections on the grounds that it was "grossly offensive". However,
three Court of Appeal judges said today that this was a clear case of
censorship. Lord Justice Brown, one of the judges, observed: "Here the
image is the message--I can see no answer to the claim that the
appellant is entitled to show--not just tell--what happens. Words alone
cannot convey the essential human character of the foetus and the
nature of its destruction by abortion." Mr Bruno Quintavalle, leader of
the Pro-Life Alliance, said: "This judgement signals the beginning of
the end of legal abortion in the UK. Once our country sees the truth,
they will know that abortion even in the earliest stages is an act of
terrible violence which kills a human being." [
BBC, 14 March]
The secretary of state for Northern Ireland has confirmed that the
British government has no plans to liberalise abortion law in Northern
Ireland. Dr John Reid gave the undertaking in a letter to Mr Nigel
Dodds, Northern Ireland's minister for social development and a member
of both the Northern Ireland assembly and the UK parliament. Mr Dodds,
who belongs to the Democratic Unionist Party, had written to Dr Reid
telling him that the overwhelming majority of people in Northern
Ireland were opposed to the extension of Britain's Abortion Act and
that any attempt to water down protection for unborn human life in
Northern Ireland would be vigorously opposed by both Catholics and
Protestants. Mr Dodds, who helped to launch
A Way of Life,
SPUC's new publication, in Belfast last week, also warned that the
Family Planning Association's legal challenge to Northern Ireland's
abortion practice, which starts today-week, was an attempt to change
Northern Ireland's pro-life law. [
Irish Independent and SPUC, 14 March]
Tesco, a British supermarket chain, is providing teenagers with
abortifacient morning-after pills free of charge. The Tesco stores in
Weston-super-Mare and Clevedon, Somerset, are dispensing the drug in
their pharmacies as part of a scheme co-ordinated by the North Somerset
primary care group. A spokesman for Tesco said that the scheme could be
extended to other Tesco stores if it proved successful. [
Bristol Evening Post, 12 March]
There is no evidence that easier availability of the morning-after pill
cuts either the number of teenage pregnancies or the surgical abortion
rate.
The Catholic bishops of Ireland have defended their decision to
support the government's defeated abortion referendum proposals. A
statement issued by the bishops read: "We vigorously refute the
analysis of our statement of December 12 [supporting the proposals]
implying that the bishops of Ireland have somehow compromised Church
teaching on the sacredness of human life in the interests of political
expediency." The bishops also insisted that "human life is sacred from
the moment of conception". [
Irish Independent, 14 March]
The European parliament yesterday approved a controversial report on
women and fundamentalism by two votes. The report was passed by 242
votes to 240, with 42 abstentions, after some controversial clauses
such as the "right to control one's own body"--which was seen as a
justification of abortion--were omitted. [
Zenit, 13 March]
Young Scottish Catholics have launched an organisation called Living
Scotland to foster understanding of moral and social issues grounded on
respect for human dignity and the right to life, in accordance with the
teaching of Pope John Paul II in
Evangelium Vitae,
his 1995 encyclical. The group's first conference, which was held in
Edinburgh at the start of this month, was addressed by prominent
Catholic pro-lifers from Scotland and further afield on topics
including the basis of human rights and the importance of chastity for
a "culture of life". Miss Weronika Hansen, founder of Living Scotland,
said that it was more important than ever that Catholics celebrated and
promoted the pro-life teaching of their Church because the erosion of
respect for human life was one of the fundamental issues of our time.
[SPUC, 14 March]
Two of the largest Orthodox Jewish groups in the United States
have announced their support for destructive research on cloned human
embryos. The Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America and the
Rabbinical Council of America have issued a joint statement which
reads: "We must be careful to distinguish between cloning for
therapeutic purposes--which ought to be pursued--and cloning for
reproductive purposes--which we oppose." [Reuters and
Washington Post, 13 March; via
Pro-Life Infonet] All human cloning is reproductive because an individual human person is brought into being in every case.
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