News, 7 May 2002
The United Nations general assembly's three-day special session on
children begins in New York tomorrow and observers expect that
participants will fail to agree about the provision of abortion to
minors. Preparatory meetings have over-run, with Canada, Europe and
Latin American countries pressing for so-called reproductive rights
(including abortion) for children. The US wants no such phraseology in
the session's declaration and supports education in sexual abstinence.
Peter Smith of International Right to Life has welcomed the American
delegation's promotion of the Bush administration's pro-life stance. [
LifeSite, 6 May,
Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute, 3 May, and see
SPUC, 29 April]
US officials are to visit China to see if the UN is involved with
coerced abortion there, though pro-life campaigners warn that they may
not find the truth. Representative Chris Smith, who last year displayed
photographs showing that UN population fund activities broke American
law on forced abortion and sterilisation, urged the three State
Department investigators to talk to ordinary citizens. He was concerned
that the Chinese government would put up a "sanitised front" and that
an imperfect investigation could do more harm than good. [
NewsMax, 2 May, and
LSN on EWTN, 4 May]
The Pope has asserted that human dignity and life are threatened by the
culture of death and "egotistical and Promethean options" in medicine
and research. John Paul II told the pontifical council for health care
workers that the church had to show the risen Christ's face to the sick
through loving service to them. [
Zenit, 3 May]
Campaigners have challenged the UK government's teenage pregnancy
strategy, saying that it encourages early sexual activity. In a letter
to MPs, the Family Education Trust cited a study at a college in
Gloucestershire in which 45% of boys said sex education had encouraged
them to experiment with intercourse. The government reportedly denies
that abstinence-education works. [
Telegraph, 3 May]
The government's strategy includes provision of abortifacient
morning-after pills. Pregnant teenagers also come under pressure to
abort their babies in other ways.
Stroke damage could be alleviated by encouraging patients' natural
mechanisms to repair and create cells. Researchers at the Medical
College of Georgia have observed how, in mice, bone marrow cells
spontaneously migrate to the brain to repair the harm caused by
strokes. They hope to find ways of enhancing this process, which has
none of the ethical drawbacks of embryo-based therapies nor the
potential problem of the rejection of donated cells. [The
Stroke journal reported on
Science Daily, 3 May]
The Hawaiian senate has unexpectedly refused to legalise
physician-assisted suicide. The measure would have allowed doctors to
prescribe doses of lethal substances to be taken by mouth. Three
senators switched sides and the vote was 14 to 11 against the proposal.
[
Catholic News Service, 6 May]
Sri Lanka's Catholic bishops are opposing possible plans to allow
abortion in certain unspecified cases. The bishops' conference has
issued a statement after media reported that the government wanted to
amend the penal code. [UCA News reported on
Catholic News Service, 2 May]
The Israeli army is planning to subsidise the cost of supplying
abortion-inducing morning-after pills to women soldiers. Servicewomen
presently have to pay the full price for such drugs at civilian
pharmacies, where prescription-free supply has been allowed since
March. The army intends that military medical staff should start to
provide the pills. [
Jerusalem Post, 2 May]
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