News, 21 March 2002
The Family Planning Association's legal challenge to Northern Ireland's
abortion practice begins today at the High Court in Belfast. The FPA is
arguing that ministers have acted illegally by failing to issue
guidance on when abortions can be carried out in Northern Ireland under
existing legal precedents. SPUC and other pro-life groups are
intervening in the case to make the point that no such ministerial
guidance is necessary because the law is quite clear. Britain's
Abortion Act 1967 does not apply to Northern Ireland, and the present
judicial review proceedings are seen by pro-lifers as a way of
undermining legal protection for the unborn. The FPA in Northern
Ireland is an affiliate of the International Planned Parenthood
Association (IPPF), which urges it members to use all possible means to
bring about abortion on demand. The IPPF stated in 1984: "Family
Planning Associations... should not use the absence of law or the
existence of an unfavourable law as an excuse for inaction; action
outside the law, and even in violation of it, is part of the process of
stimulating change." [SPUC, 21 March]
A man is suing his wife in Beijing, China, for infringing his
right to father a child after she had an abortion. The case is the
first to be brought under a law passed by the National People's
Congress codifying China's one-child family population control policy
and stipulating that women have no overriding priority over their
spouses in deciding whether to have a child. [
BBC, 20 March]
Figures released by China's state family planning commission have
indicated that 46% of Chinese couples are using intra-uterine devices
(IUDs) to avoid becoming pregnant in order to comply with the country's
coercive population control policy. [
BBC, 20 March]
IUDs work by preventing the successful implantation of a newly
conceived child in his or her mother's womb, and thereby cause early
abortions. British government figures indicate that 5% of all British
women aged between 16 and 49 were fitted with an IUD in 1999. [SPUC and
Office for National Statistics]
Legislators in Oklahoma have passed a bill which would facilitate legal
actions by women against abortion practitioners who failed to provide
them with adequate information on the physical and emotional risks of
the procedure. The measure was passed by 95 votes to one in the state
House. [
LifeSite, 20 March]
An opinion poll commissioned by the UK's largest private abortion
provider has indicated that 43% of British voters consider the issue of
abortion to be "fairly important" or "very important" when deciding on
which candidate to support. The poll was commissioned by the British
Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) and conducted by MORI. [
CNSNews, 20 March]
John Howard, the Australian prime minister, will meet the premiers of
the country's six states and two territories on 5 April to decide on a
national policy regarding stem cell research. It is reported that the
federal government is leaning in the direction of a ban on destructive
research involving embryos left over from in vitro fertilisation
treatment. The campaign to prohibit such research is being spearheaded
within the federal government by Kevin Andrews, the federal minister
for ageing, who has strong pro-life views. [
CNSNews, 20 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