News, 13 November 2002
Legislators in Lithuania have sent a bill to liberalise the law
relating to abortion and reproductive technologies back to the
government for reworking without specifying any deadline. The move by
the Lithuanian parliament yesterday means that legislators will not
reconsider the bill before presidential elections are held at the end
of the year. A pro-life exhibition was also opened in the parliament
building yesterday and has been described as a great success. [Ewa
Kowalewska, HLI Europe, 12 November; see
digest for 1 November]
A prominent US senator has announced his intention to introduce federal
legislation banning all research on human cloning. The office of
Senator Sam Brownback confirmed that a bill to prohibit all forms of
cloning, including so-called therapeutic cloning, would be introduced
next year. The legislation is thought to have a good chance of success
after Republicans took control of the Senate following last week's
elections. Ari Fleischer, the White House press spokesman, said last
week that a total ban on human cloning was a top priority for President
Bush. [
Financial Times, 13 November]
The US Catholic bishops have reaffirmed their commitment to speak out
on the sanctity of human life and work for the reversal of Roe v Wade -
the 1973 supreme court decision which declared a constitutional right
to abortion. In a statement released yesterday, the bishops praised the
achievements of the pro-life movement in the US over the last 30 years,
noting that fewer abortions were being performed each year, that more
Americans now identified themselves as pro-life, and that the pro-life
movement was "brimming with the vibrancy of youth". The bishops then
declared: "Roe v Wade cannot stand as the law of this great nation ...
We are committed, no matter how long it may take, no matter the
sacrifices required, to bringing about a reversal of this tragic
supreme court decision." [
USCCB statement, 12 November]
The executive director of the pro-abortion United Nations Population
Fund (UNFPA) has described how she exploits certain Catholic priests in
developing countries to undermine the pro-life influence of the
Catholic Church. At a Women's International Forum meeting held in New
York last week, Thoraya Obaid admitted that UNFPA's agenda was being
hampered in Catholic countries, and that UNFPA could not afford to
ignore the Church because it spent so much money on healthcare around
the world. She then revealed the strategy she employed in South America
of courting relationships "with a few priests who will refer women for
other family planning options". [
C-FAM Friday Fax, 8 November]
The 20th convention of National Lutherans for Life (NLL) has brought
together nearly 250 Lutheran representatives from across the US and
Canada to discuss how Christians are to speak out against abortion. The
convention's theme of "Time to Speak" was elucidated by Rev Dr James I.
Lamb, NLL's executive director, in his Sunday morning sermon when he
said: "It is time to speak because we, as God's people, have something
to say... It is time to speak because we have a message of life and
people do not need to turn to death as the solution to their problems."
[Lutherans for Life, 12 November; 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