News, 20 November 2002
Abortion was likened to murder in the Welsh national assembly
yesterday. During a debate in the assembly's health committee on
technical changes to regulations governing abortion notification forms,
David Davies, a Conservative frontbencher, said: "I have never
understood the argument that says while it is a serious criminal
offence to kill a child while it is outside its mother's womb, the
state is prepared to condone the killing of a child which lies within
the womb. It is a tragedy that thousands of lives are deliberately
terminated in this fashion each year. It is particularly sad for the
mothers involved and for the medical staff who have to carry through
these unpleasant procedures." Mr Davies was then rebuked by the
committee chairman for his "emotional" comments. [
The Western Mail, 20 November; SPUC] Responsibility for the law on abortion practice is reserved to the UK parliament in Westminster.
The Birmingham Health Authority in central England is planning to hand
out abortifacient morning-after pills in youth clubs used by children
as young as nine. Sarah Farmer, the health authority's teenage
pregnancy co-ordinator, claimed that the service was needed due to
rising demand for so-called emergency contraception among young people.
The morning-after pill is already available to youngsters at a walk-in
facility located in the city centre's Boot's store, but from next
Spring family planning nurses will also be able to provide the
abortion-inducing drug at youth centres and information shops for young
people. Birmingham's Catholic archbishop Vincent Nichols said that he
was appalled to learn of the plan. [
Birmingham Evening Mail, 19 November]
Representatives of all three primary decision-making bodies of the
European Union will meet on Friday in an attempt to reach agreement on
the new regulation to govern EU overseas aid policy. As reported
yesterday, the present text of the Sandbaek report, which constitutes
the blueprint of the new regulation, would force EU member states to
fund abortions in the poorest countries. In a bid to pass the
regulation by a fast-track procedure and avoid the need for a second
reading in the parliament, representatives of the European Commission,
the European Council of Ministers and the European parliament's
development committee will meet on Friday to try to resolve
differences. However, the meeting follows on from another one last week
which broke up without agreement, and agreement is unlikely on Friday
because pro-life MEPs cannot accept any provision for abortion funding.
The development committee is now due to vote on the Sandbaek report on
2 December, and a vote in the full parliament is scheduled in January.
[SPUC, 20 November]
The United Nations general assembly yesterday adopted a resolution
which effectively rubber-stamped the decision of its legal committee to
delay the drafting of a proposed convention against human cloning until
next October. The committee had been charged by the general assembly
last year with the task of drafting a convention to "prevent practices
which are contrary to human dignity", but the US, Spain and other
countries argued against a Franco-German proposal for a partial cloning
ban which would distinguish between cloning for reproductive and
so-called therapeutic purposes. The US representative told the general
assembly yesterday that support for a comprehensive cloning ban was
growing, while the French and Germans issued a statement regretting the
failure to reach agreement and urging "a non-dogmatic" approach.
[Guardian, 20 November]
A prominent American biomedical ethicist has said that society
would be better off if pre-natal genetic screening and abortion were
used to prevent the birth of blind and severely disabled babies. In a
lecture at the University of Rhode Island, Dan W Brock said that the
self-assessment of disabled people who claimed to enjoy a high quality
of life was misleading because they had to adapt to their
circumstances. He said: "They do suffer real disadvantages. Our notion
of how good a person's life is is not fully determined by their own
subjective self-assessment." Dr Brock, who is a former philosophy
professor at Brown University and now works for the US National
Institutes of Health in Maryland, continued: "Preventing a severe
disability is not for the sake of the child who will have it. Rather,
it is for the sake of less suffering and loss of opportunity in the
world." [
Narragansett Times, 20 November] A spokesman for SPUC commented: "Here is another example of twisted thinking to justify the killing of unborn children."
All five Democrat members of the US Congress from Oregon have filed a
brief with the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals in favour of the state's
assisted suicide law. Senator Ron Wyden together with four members of
the House of Representatives argued that the federal justice department
had acted beyond its powers when it attempted to interfere in the
working of the state law by ruling that assisted suicide was not a
'legitimate medical purpose' for federally controlled drugs. Senator
Wyden has also pledged to do all he can to scupper proposed federal
legislation to block assisted suicide. [
EWTN News, 14 November]
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