News, 25 October 2002
This Sunday (27 October) marks the 35th anniversary of the passing of
Britain's Abortion Act. Since the Act came into effect on 27 April
1968, nearly 6,000,000 unborn children have been killed under its
terms. Despite assurances by the original supporters of the bill in
parliament that it would not lead to the practice of abortion on
demand, there are now more than 500 registered abortions performed
every day of the year in England, Wales and Scotland. Since the Act
was amended in 1990, abortion has been permitted up to the 24th week
of pregnancy for broad social reasons and up to birth in other cases
such as foetal handicap. Pro-life groups in the UK will be marking the
anniversary with a series of acts of witness, such as an initiative by
members of SPUC to have a candle burning in a window of their home to
mark the deaths of so many unborn victims. Meanwhile, pro-abortionists
such as Marie Stopes International are using the anniversary to push
for an even further liberalisation of the law to give women a
statutory legal right to abortion. [SPUC, 25 October]
The European parliament has agreed to increase the EU's overseas aid
budget for "population and reproductive healthcare" by 300%. Last year
the amount allotted in the budget to this area of overseas aid was 8
million euro, but the plan for this year's budget was to increase the
allotment to 14 million euro. However, an amendment to the budget
tabled by Mr Göran Färm, a socialist MEP from Sweden, seeking to
increase the level of funding still further to 24 million euro was
adopted at the plenary session of the parliament in Strasbourg
yesterday without a vote. Pro-lifers expressed disappointment at the
adoption of the amendment, particularly since it was adopted without a
vote. The 24 million euro will be available for use in projects around
the world, and will be in addition to the amount of EU money spent on
reproductive health projects in particular countries. [SPUC, 25
October]
A Dutch doctor who was convicted of helping an infirm but not
seriously ill elderly patient to commit suicide in 1988 could face a
retrial under the new law on euthanasia. The country's solicitor
general has advised the high court that Dr Philip Sutorius should be
retried in the light of the new law because no punishment was imposed
by the court which originally found him guilty. The case has raised
the issue of whether so-called existential suffering - when a patient
is deemed simply to be "tired of life" - should be considered a
ground for legal euthanasia. [British Medical Journal, 26 October]
Experts from the UK have told the US President's Council on Bioethics
that people in Britain accept a clear distinction between early human
embryos and older unborn children. Baroness Helena Kennedy QC,
chairman of the Human Genetics Commission, and Suzi Leather, chairman
of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, addressed the
council last week to offer the benefit of their experiences in the UK.
Baroness Kennedy told the committee that people in the UK accepted "a
clear distinction" between cloning for reproductive purposes and
so-called therapeutic cloning. Some members of the council praised the
two British experts for striking "a very sensible balance", but
Alfonson Gomez-Lobo, a professor of moral theology, rejected the UK's
policies on embryology because they were based on utilitarian grounds.
[British Medical Journal, 26 October]
A nurse in Louisiana is claiming that the state's health department
has threatened to terminate her employment because she continues to
refuse to dispense the morning-after pill. Cynthia Day, a nurse at a
clinic in New Orleans, believes that life is sacred from the moment of
conception, and the American Center for Law and Justice is supporting
her claim of religious discrimination against the state. In a similar
case earlier this year a jury decided that a nurse who had refused to
dispense the morning-after pill had had her constitutional rights to
freedom of speech and religion violated. [
WorldNetDaily, 24 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