News, 23 May 2002
The abortifacient morning-after pill will probably be available from
pharmacists throughout New Zealand from the end of July. The country's
ministry of health decided last year to allow pharmacists to dispense
the drug once they had undergone special training, and the
Pharmaceutical Society has said that more than 600 pharmacies have now
enrolled for training programmes that will begin over the next six
weeks. 90 pharmacists in Auckland have already received accreditation
to dispense the drug, which can cause an early abortion by preventing
the implantation of a newly conceived embryo. [
New Zealand Herald, 23 May]
A 70-year-old cancer sufferer whose stated intention to kill herself
has kindled a debate on euthanasia in Australia [see news for
26 March and
4 April]
has taken her own life. Nancy Crick, who was suffering from bowel
cancer, took a lethal cocktail yesterday night in the presence of 21
"friends, family and supporters" and was dead half an hour later. Those
who were present at the suicide could be liable for prosecution under
Queensland state law on the basis that they were assisting. A spokesman
for the police said that normal procedures were being followed. [
CNSNews, 23 May]
It is reported that a European Union document advocating access to
abortion will be voted on by the European parliament next month. The
commission of women's rights and equality of opportunities of the
European parliament has prepared a document which recommends that "the
voluntary interruption of pregnancy should be legal, safe and
universally accessible" in EU member states and in those countries
which are seeking membership. [
Pravda, 22 May]
Abortion is illegal in almost all cases in Ireland, a full member of
the EU, and in Poland and Malta, which are seeking membership.
An opinion poll in Denmark has suggested that a large majority
support the legalisation of euthanasia. A survey conducted by PLS
Ramboell and published in the
Jyllands-Posten
newspaper indicates that 68% support the legalisation of euthanasia
generally, while 93% support it to end the suffering of terminally ill
patients and 82% support it for those with incurable illnesses. Lars
Løkke Rasmussen, the Danish health minister, said that he was shocked
by the findings, "especially by the numbers of people who would like to
end the lives of the aged, mentally ill and handicapped people". [AFP,
21 May; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
In a debate on euthanasia yesterday, members of the UK parliament
warned that a pro-euthanasia agenda was being advanced in the
medico-legal world without proper parliamentary scrutiny. Mr David
Amess, a pro-life Conservative MP, condemned the General Medical
Council's guidance in
Withholding and Withdrawing Life-Prolonging Treatment: Good Practice in Decision Making
because it endorsed euthanasia by omission. Dr Brian Iddon, a Labour
MP, warned that so-called advanced directives put patients in a more
vulnerable position, and Tim Loughton, the opposition spokesman for
health, said that the problem of patients "being made to feel that they
are too much of a burden on their families....is increasing with the
ageing of the population." [
House of Commons Hansard, 22 May]
Anthony Ozimic, SPUC's political spokesman, commented: "We hope that
such perceptive criticisms by parliamentarians make the government
realise that it will have a real fight on its hands if it tries to pass
pro-euthanasia legislation."
The Catholic Church in the US has criticised a new bill on cloning
which has been presented by some as a compromise measure but which
would allow the creation and destruction of human clones for research
purposes. Gail Quinn, executive director of the US bishops' secretariat
for pro-life activities, has written to members of the US senate urging
them to reject the new bill because it "defines a subclass of humanity
as nothing more than research material, to be produced solely in order
to be destroyed". [
Catholic News Service, 21 May]
The US senate is expected to vote on human cloning legislation next
month. The House of Representatives has already voted in favour of a
comprehensive ban on all human cloning.
A 22-year-old man in the US has been sentenced to five years in
prison for an attempted forced abortion. Michael T Bullock of Missouri
poured poison into his pregnant girlfriend's drink in the hope that it
would cause a miscarriage, but the 19-year-old woman later gave birth
to a healthy baby. [
St Louis Post Dispatch, 22 May; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
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