News, 19 March 2002
The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France, will hear Mrs
Dianne Pretty's request for assisted suicide today. Mrs Pretty's
lawyers are arguing that the refusal of the English director of public
prosecutions to grant her husband immunity from criminal prosecution if
he helps her to die infringes five articles of the European Convention
on Human Rights. The court's decision is not expected for at least two
weeks. [
BBC, 19 March]
A British charity has warned that recreational drug use and exposure to
chemicals which mimic the effects of oestrogen could be leading to
higher levels of certain so-called birth defects. The Birth Defects
Foundation cited British government figures indicating that incidence
of cleft lip or palate rose from 5.9 cases per 1,000 births in 1995 to
9.2 in 1999. Cleft lips and palates have been cited as grounds for
abortion up to birth in Britain. 1,833 children were killed by abortion
in Britain in 2000 on the grounds that they had "physical or mental
abnormalities". [
Daily Telegraph, 19 March; Office for National Statistics; SPUC]
Britain reportedly has the second highest abortion rate in the European
Union. A Council of Europe report suggests that Britain had 15.7
abortions per 1,000 women of child-bearing age per year. Sweden had the
highest annual rate of 18.3 and Denmark the third highest (15.5). [
Irish Times, 19 March]
The report suggests that Ireland's rate of 7.8 (all performed in
Britain) was higher than the Netherlands', but Dutch abortion
statistics ignore the widespread abortive practice known as menstrual
extraction. [SPUC]
It is reported that the new government of Portugal opposes the
introduction of permissive abortion legislation. The centre-right
Social Democrats emerged as the largest party, displacing the ruling
Socialists, following last Sunday's Portuguese elections. They will now
attempt to form a coalition with another right-wing party. Britain's
Guardian
newspaper [betraying a pro-abortion bias] reports: "Any hope of reform
of the draconian [pro-life] abortion laws was dashed by the result." [
The Guardian, 19 March]
Last year's Indian supreme court order that state governments should
"seal and seize" all unregistered ultrasound machines may be failing to
stop widespread sex-selective abortion of girls. In Muzaffarnagar,
Uttar Pradesh, it is reported that the number of ultrasound machines
rose from five to 45 over the past 10 years, and that there was a
corresponding fall in the cost of an abortion from 1,200 rupees ($25)
to 200 rupees ($4). Only about 10 machines are now licensed in the
district, but several clinics are thought to be continuing to function
illegally. [
NDTV News, 17 March]
The Roman Catholic archbishop of New Orleans, Louisiana, has criticised
a decision by the Loyola Catholic university in the city to let the
president of the pro-abortion National Organization for Women (NOW)
speak on its premises. Archbishop Alfred Hughes said that NOW was an
organisation "that advocates an extremist pro-abortion agenda" and that
Ms Kim Gandy's pro-abortion views were "contrary to the clear and
unambiguous teachings of the Catholic Church". [
AP, 15 March; via Northern Light]
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