News, 24 May 2002
Provisional figures have indicated that about 186,200 unborn children
were killed under the terms of the British Abortion Act in England and
Wales last year. The provisional total published yesterday by the
Office for National Statistics, which takes into account incomplete
forms and may be revised, is the third highest ever and represents an
increase of 0.4% on 2000. Of the total number of abortions performed in
England and Wales, about 176,000 were performed on residents. The
abortion rate was 17 abortions per 1,000 resident women aged between 15
and 44. 76% of abortions were funded by the National Health Service, up
from 74% in 2000. According to the provisional statistics, 6,625 women
with addresses in the Irish Republic obtained abortions in England and
Wales last year, the highest Irish total ever. [
Media release, Office for National Statistics, 23 May;
Irish Independent, 24 May]
Nine days before the people of Switzerland vote in a referendum on
whether to legalise abortion, an opinion poll has suggested that they
are likely to vote decisively in favour. According to the poll
conducted for a Swiss television station, 63% are in favour of the
proposal to legalise abortion up to the 12th week of pregnancy, while
only 24% are against. [Bloomberg, 24 May] Abortion is already widely
tolerated in Switzerland.
The RU-486 abortion drug is being promoted in South Africa. The
drug was approved by the country's Medicines Control Council last year
and a pro-abortion organisation called the Women's Health Project (WHP)
now plans to provide it at five locations around the country from the
end of September. The WHP, which advises the South African department
of health, is asking the government to become involved in publicising
and providing the drug. Doctors have been obliged to provide abortion
on request up to the 12th week of pregnancy in South Africa since 1996.
[
AllAfrica.com, 23 May; via Northern Light]
Members of the Canadian house of commons have this week been debating
government legislation on assisted reproduction and embryo research.
The second reading debate on the Assisted Human Reproduction Bill has
seen a number of pro-life speeches, such as by Jason Kenney who
insisted that it was always "unethical to manipulate and destroy human
embryos for utilitarian purposes". Once the bill has been granted a
second reading, it will be referred to a parliamentary committee for
further scrutiny. [
LifeSite, 23 May;
Canadian Hansard]
A majority of Americans now believe that abortion is "morally wrong",
according to a nationwide opinion poll. The poll conducted by Gallup
found that 53% of the population believed that abortion was "morally
wrong", up from 45% last year. Only 38% of respondents thought that
abortion was "morally acceptable". While 90% of respondents opposed
human cloning, only 52% said that embryonic stem cell research was
morally incorrect. However, the respondents were not told that such
research entails the destruction of a unique human being. Another poll
conducted last month found that 68% of Americans supported President
Bush's opposition to all human cloning, including so-called therapeutic
purposes. [
Pro-Life Infonet, 22 May]
An unborn child has foiled an attempted murder in the United States.
Doctors believe that, when a masked gunman opened fire on Angelique
McKinney in Chicago, Illinois, her unborn baby of 30 weeks' gestation
shielded her vital organs from the bullets. The baby, named Ariel,
suffered bullet wounds but survived and was born by Caesarean section
last Sunday. [
LifeSite, 23 May]
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