News, 24 October 2002
The state government of Kano in Nigeria has announced a crackdown on
private hospitals and clinics which perform illegal abortions. A task
force has been established to monitor the activities of private
facilities and the government intends to prosecute those found to have
performed unauthorised abortions and other surgical procedures. [
AllAfrica.com, 23 October; via Northern Light] Abortion is illegal in Nigeria in every case apart from to save the life of the mother.
Britain's national health service provided 201,000 courses of the
abortifacient morning-after pill at family planning clinics in the year
2001-02, according to official government statistics. This total
represents a decrease of 15% from the previous year, but this is
explained by the fact that the morning-after pill became available from
pharmacists without a doctor's prescription at the start of 2001. [
Department of Health, 23 October]
The Canadian province of Nova Scotia has announced that it will defend
itself against a legal challenge to its policy on abortion funding [see
yesterday's digest].
Dr Henry Morgentaler, a prominent Canadian abortionist, is suing the
province for its refusal to pay the total cost of abortions carried out
in private clinics. However, Mr Jamie Muir, Nova Scotia's health
minister, retorted that Dr Morgentaler was more interested in publicity
than the rights of women. [
Broadcast News, 23 October]
The US Agency for International Development (USAID) has been criticised
by pro-lifers for granting $65 million to the Population Council, the
organisation which holds the US patent for RU-486. The money has been
allotted to a programme for HIV and AIDS care in the developing world,
but pro-lifers have noted that USAID has an agenda which encourages the
provision of birth control. [
LifeSite, 23 October]
Chinese experts on population control have claimed that their country
has a lower abortion rate than the global average. Experts attending a
conference in Kunming City, south west China, agreed that the Chinese
population control policy did not depend on abortion but, rather, on
contraceptive measures. However, Steve Mosher, president of the
Population Research Institute in the US, commented: "China's new law on
population and family planning insures that coercive abortion will
continue to be used against women pregnant outside the plan... It is
the desire of the Chinese to maintain the support of UNFPA [the United
Nations Population Fund] in order to hide forced abortion and
sterilisation behind an international seal of approval, as it is
important for China to use external media communications to distort its
brutal one-child policy. Internally, however, the women of China
receive a very different message. They continue to be the principal
victims of the one-child policy." [
Xinhua News Agency, 22 October; PRI, 23 October]
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