News, 22 May 2002
Police in the Republic of Ireland are investigating death threats made
to Mrs Dana Rosemary Scallon, a prominent pro-life member of the
European parliament, during her unsuccessful Irish general election
campaign. Dana received a letter and a number of menacing phone
messages because she had campaigned for a 'no' vote in the recent
abortion referendum. However, Dana has said that the reasons for her
opposition to the referendum proposals have been misrepresented. She
and many other pro-lifers were against the proposals because they would
have weakened legal protection of unborn children, especially
pre-implantation embryos. [
The Irish Examiner, 22 May; SPUC]
An American pro-life organisation has claimed that the abortion
industry in the US is consistently failing to adhere to state and
federal laws on the reporting of child sexual abuse and parental
notification. Mark Crutcher, president of Life Dynamics Inc., will
present the findings of his organisation's investigation next Saturday.
The report, entitled "Child Predators", claims that between 60% and 80%
of girls aged 15 or younger who become pregnant were impregnated by
adult men, but that abortion providers often conceal these crimes when
an underage girl requests an abortion. [
LifeSite, 21 May]
A survey of doctors in Michigan has found that 95% believe that
pregnant women have a moral obligation to protect the health of their
unborn child by abstaining from excessive alcohol consumption or the
use of illicit drugs. An analysis of questionnaires completed by more
than 800 doctors in Michigan in 1998, and published in the April 2002
issue of the
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
indicates that a majority of all family doctors, obstetricians and
paediatricians would support mandatory alcohol screening of pregnant
women, and over half consider that the use of illicit drugs during
pregnancy should be legally defined as a form of child abuse. [
Reuters, 17 May; via NWHIC]
Researchers have suggested that American teenagers are becoming more
sexually responsible, with rates of sexual activity, pregnancy and
abortion all falling among 15 to 17-year-olds. A study published in
Context,
a journal of the American Sociological Association, indicates that the
number of boys aged between 15 and 17 who are sexually active has
fallen by 8.5% in the past decade. The teen pregnancy rate is now at
its lowest since 1975, and the abortion rate for teenagers fell by 31%
between 1986 and 1996. [AScribe Newswire, 21 May; via Northern Light]
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