News, 15 March 2002
It is reported that legislators in Nepal yesterday approved a bill to
legalise abortion. A bill to legalise the procedure failed last year
after it was rejected by the upper house of the country's legislature,
but a new campaign to liberalise abortion law was launched last month.
Any bill would require the signature of King Gyanendra in order to
become law. Last year the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights of the United Nations explicitly demanded that Nepal should
legalise abortion. [
The Times of India, 15 March; also SPUC news digests for
13 September and
12 October 2001, and
13 February 2002]
An Australian Anglican bishop has pointed out the logical inconsistency
in opposing destructive research on human embryos while at the same
time supporting
in vitro
fertilisation (IVF). Although he is apparently in favour of IVF, George
Browning, Anglican bishop of Canberra and Goulburn, refused to support
a statement by 10 other Anglican bishops in New South Wales urging the
federal government only to support stem cell research which did not
entail the destruction of embryos. Bishop Browning said: "Using the
logic of the statement, surely to produce embryos, knowing that the
vast majority of them are not going to be placed back in the womb of
the mother, but are to be 'wasted', must be totally unacceptable. I
have not heard any argument from the Anglican community which opposes
the IVF programme." [
The Canberra Times, 14 March]
SPUC has warmly welcomed yesterday's victory for the Pro-Life Alliance
in the English court of appeal over the refusal of the BBC and other
broadcasters to show an election film featuring photographs of aborted
babies. Paul Tully, SPUC's general secretary, said: "Abortion is one of
the most common surgical procedures and it is absolutely right that the
public should be fully informed of what is entailed. It is particularly
outrageous that our BBC should have interfered in the working of
democracy in this way." The BBC has announced its intention to take the
case to the House of Lords, England's highest court.
A member of the US Supreme Court has re-stated his view that there
is no constitutional right to abortion in the United States. In a
speech on Wednesday, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who was
appointed by President Ronald Reagan in 1986, said: "My votes in
abortion cases have nothing to do with my pro-life views. They have to
do with the text of the constitution. And there is nothing, nothing in
the constitution that guarantees the right to an abortion." [
The Buffalo News, 14 March] The US Supreme Court declared a constitutional right to abortion in the 1973
Roe v Wade case, although this judgement could be reversed if future appointees to the Supreme Court share the views of Justice Scalia.
A study carried out in New Zealand has suggested a link between
abortion and domestic violence. Half of the 62 women who took part in a
survey conducted at an abortion clinic in Waikato between July and
November last year claimed that they had suffered physical or sexual
abuse, most often at the hands of their partner or a family member. [
Waikato Times, 15 March]
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) marked a "national day of
appreciation for abortion providers" last Sunday. The ACLU's website
urged Americans to "stand up with your abortion service providers and
say: Thank you for your heroism, perseverance, courage and commitment
to women." The day was initiated in 1996 and is co-sponsored by a
number of abortion providers and pro-abortion groups such as the
Planned Parenthood Federation of America. [CNSNews, 8 March]
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