News, 19 November 2002
Dana Rosemary Scallon, a prominent pro-life member of the European
parliament from Ireland, has expressed her shock at confirmation that a
draft regulation on international aid would oblige Irish tax-payers to
fund abortions in the poorest countries, despite Ireland's pro-life
constitution. Ulla Sandbaek, a pro-abortion MEP, told Ireland's Radio
Kerry today that abortion would be funded by the EU and that this was
legally possible because it was in tune with the language of the UN's
1994 Cairo conference on population. The Sandbaek report constitutes
the blueprint for a new EU regulation on international aid and will
probably be voted on by a European parliamentary committee next month.
As it presently stands, the report envisages a dramatic increase in EU
funding for so-called reproductive health services, including abortion.
EU regulations are binding on all member states. Ms Scallon said: "The
Irish government can no longer remain silent on this matter." [Dana
Rosemary Scallon, 14 and 19 November]
472 girls as young as 11 have received the abortifacient
morning-after pill from school nurses in Oxfordshire, England, without
the knowledge of their parents over the past five years, according to
newly released statistics. A government-backed pilot scheme in which
school nurses have been able to dispense the drug to pupils during
lunchtime has been operating in 17 schools across Oxfordshire, and the
department of health is now urging other local authorities to join the
scheme. Among those which have agreed is West Sussex, where the scheme
is due to commence next Spring, and Wandsworth in south London, where a
school in Balham will pilot the project in the new year. The stated aim
of the schemes is to reduce teenage pregnancy rates, but the Daily
Telegraph reports that even the pioneers of the scheme in Oxfordshire
have admitted that it has had little effect on recorded conception
rates. [Daily Telegraph, 17 November]
The chief executive of the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority (HFEA) has been asked to resign after losing a vote of no
confidence. Dr Maureen Dalziel had only been in the post for a few
months. Suzi Leather, the HFEA's chairman, insisted that the move was
not related to an investigation into procedures at IVF clinics
following a number of high-profile mix-ups. [
BBC News online, 18 November] The HFEA regulates IVF and embryo experimentation in the UK.
The deputy press secretary at the White House has insisted that
pro-life legislation remains a top priority for President Bush. When
asked at a press briefing last week whether the focus on homeland
security and anti-terrorism legislation meant that pro-life measures
were now low on the priority list, Scott McClellan replied: "No, no.
The President believes that we need to be a culture that welcomes life
at all stages." [
LifeSite, 15 November]
Pope John Paul II has observed that promotion of abortion, artificial
birth control and divorce have had "tragic results" by leading to the
"disintegration of the family nucleus in its most essential elements".
Addressing a group of Brazilian bishops in Rome, the Pope said that a
failure to proclaim the truth about such issues "would be a grave
pastoral omission which would lead people to error". [
Zenit, 18 November]
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