News, 20 March 2002
It is reported that police in England might lay two murder charges
against the killer of a heavily pregnant woman who was hacked to death
with a machete. The body of the woman, who was of Afro-Caribbean origin
and between 30 and 40 weeks pregnant, was found last weekend dumped in
a picnic area in Shipbourne, near Sevenoaks, Kent. [
Daily Telegraph,
20 March] Under English law, murder charges could only be brought if
the child had taken a breath outside of his or her mother and died
subsequently. Otherwise, a charge of child destruction could be brought
under the Infant Life Preservation Act 1929.
An American man has become the first to be convicted of abortion
in the state of New York since the supreme court invalidated state laws
against abortion in the 1973
Roe v Wade
judgement. Jeremy Powell, 20, pleaded guilty to the charge that he had
deliberately beaten his pregnant girlfriend with the intention of
killing their unborn child in January. The woman, also 20, had refused
her boyfriend's demand that she have an abortion. [
The Buffalo News, 16 March]
The Roman Catholic bishops of Canada have condemned plans by the
pro-abortion group calling itself Catholics for a Free Choice (CFC) to
mount a billboard campaign at this year's Catholic World Youth Day in
Toronto. The letter from the president of the Canadian Catholic Bishops
Conference to the director of the World Youth Day states that CFC is
"usurping the Church's name; indeed, it is in no way recognized as
Catholic". [
LifeSite, 19 March]
The authors of a study on hysterectomies in Britain have suggested that
as many as 75% of them could be avoided if doctors used other methods,
including the fitting of abortifacient intra-uterine devices, to solve
problems such as heavy periods. [
BBC, 20 March]
An SPUC spokesman observed that many people may be unaware that the
IUD, or coil, worked by causing early abortions and said that it was
vital for women to be told the truth.
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