News, 26 November 2002
It is reported that Peru has refused to accept a grant from the UK
government's department for international development because it was
intended for projects which may have included the promotion of
abortion. An extremely biased report by the pro-abortion Center for
Health and Gender Equality in the US claims that Fernando Carbone, the
Peruvian health minister, turned down a five-year $24 million bilateral
development assistance grant from the UK because it was intended to
develop so-called reproductive health services - usually understood to
include abortion and abortifacient methods of birth control. The
Peruvian health ministry reportedly rejected a grant from the Spanish
Agency for International Development last month for the same reason. [
Center for Health and Gender Equality, 21 November]
The UK government has announced a substantial increase in funding for
the official body which regulates IVF fertility treatment and embryo
research. Health minister Hazel Blears announced a further £1 million
in government funding for the Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority (HFEA) in this financial year, and a further rise next year.
It is reported that the increases will take the total level of funding
from a little over £2 million per year to £5.5 million per year. In
addition, the HFEA will be allowed to raise its licence fee income to
£4 million in 2003/04. The funding increase comes in response to a
House of Commons report, and will be tied to a range of new measures to
bolster the body's regulatory procedures. In announcing the increase,
Ms Blears observed that "Britain is well placed to be a world leader in
human genetics and embryology research." [
DoH press release, 25 November;
Independent, 26 November]
Doctors and other medical staff have received long prison sentences in
Italy for their involvement in illegal abortions. Two doctors each
received 20-year sentences for performing the abortions, while a
obstetrician received a sentence of 14 years and an anaesthetist and a
secretary each received sentences of 12 years. Two others received
minor sentences, and four were acquitted. A total of 67 people have
been charged with involvement in 12 abortions performed at a clinic in
Rome between 1995 and 1997, with the remaining 56 defendants facing
trial in March. [AFP, 25 November; via Pro-Life E-News] Abortion is
legal on request in Italy up to 90 days after conception, and is
allowed later in pregnancy in cases of foetal anomaly or to save the
mother's life.
A traditional healer will appear in court in Botswana tomorrow in
connection with the discovery of 26 foetuses found in shallow graves.
The healer is expected to be charged with supplying instruments and
drugs to procure abortion. Two women have already been sentenced to
eight months in prison for having abortions with the healer's help. [
AllAfrica. com, 25 November; via Northern Light]
The section on abortion in Botswana's penal code is based on the UK's
Offences Against the Person Act 1861, although a number of statutory
exceptions were added in 1991 and the country's abortion law is now
said to be one of the most liberal in sub-Saharan Africa. [UN
Population Division, 2002]
Mr Christopher Reeve, the actor who played Superman in a series of
films before being paralysed in an accident in 1995, is continuing his
campaign to promote destructive embryonic stem cell research. Mr Reeve
testified before a New Jersey state senate committee yesterday in
favour of a proposed law which would promote embryonic stem cell
research in direct contradiction of the US federal government's policy.
California is the only state to have passed a law to promote stem cell
research on embryos, but legislators in Ohio, Virginia, Wisconsin and
Massachusetts, as well as in New Jersey, are considering similar
measures. [
New Jersey News, 26 November]
The teenage pregnancy rate in Uganda has dropped from 45% in 1995 to
31% this year, according to a report prepared by the Ugandan health
ministry. The decrease has happened without the promotion of abortion,
which remains illegal in most cases. The news appears to contradict the
views of a number of South African MPs who urged Uganda last week to
legalise abortion because of high rates of sexual abuse and moral
degeneration in the country. [
Xinhua news agency, 26 November, via Northern Light; see
digest for 21 November]
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