News, 12 September 2002
The abortifacient morning-after pill is to be offered free of charge to
men in Scotland's largest city. Dr Des Spence, one of the doctors
leading the 'Choices Project' at the Maryhill Health Centre in Glasgow,
said: "The idea is that we should encourage men to play an equal part
in contraception.... We have encouraged women to carry condoms, so we
should encourage men to carry the morning-after pill." [
Sunday Herald, 8 September]
Ian Murray, head of SPUC Scotland, said: "This scheme is dangerous and
flawed. It can only lead to more use the morning-after pill, which can
cause an early abortion and offers no protection against sexually
transmitted infections. It will also endanger women's health because no
doctor or pharmacist will be able to check or even ask about their
medical history. This scheme will lead to more unborn children losing
their lives, and will put young women and girls at greater risk of
abuse and sexual maltreatment by men."
The European parliament's women's rights committee has rejected a
budget amendment which had the aim of implicitly re-instating the
monopoly on EU funding for women's groups previously enjoyed by the
pro-abortion European Women's Lobby. Pro-lifers succeeded in ending the
EWL's monopoly last year after a concerted three-year campaign. [
Euro-Fam, 10 September]
The UK's Medical Research Council (MRC) has revealed that three
biotechnology companies have offered to donate stem cell lines to
Europe's first stem cell bank launched yesterday. Sir George Radda,
chief executive of the MRC, said that it was essential for industry to
become involved in the project. It has been widely reported that the
bank will store embryonic stem cells, although ReNeuron, a British
company, has said that it will also deposit lines of human foetal brain
cells in the bank. [
Financial Times, 12 September]
The European Union's commissioner for development and humanitarian aid
has signed the financing agreement to provide 32 million euros in extra
funding for sexual and reproductive health projects in 22 developing
countries. Poul Nielson signed the document on Tuesday after delivering
a speech in which he strongly criticised the US decision to withdraw
funding from international pro-abortion groups. 10 million euros will
be given to the International Planned Parenthood Federation and 20
million euros to the pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund
(UNFPA). The remaining 2 million euros will be for monitoring and
evaluation. [
EU Commission, 10 September;
IPPF News, 11 September]
The medical director of an English fertility clinic has refused to
offer routine pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) tests for babies
conceived through IVF. PGD can be used to screen out babies with
various chromosomal anomalies, such as Down's syndrome. Peter Brinsden
of the Bourn Hall centre in Cambridgeshire said that he had yet to be
convinced of the effectiveness of such tests, and added that "screening
embryos and throwing out what's not perfect also poses some ethical
difficulties". [
Cambridge Newspapers, 10 September]
The selection and rejection of IVF babies through PGD is an example of
eugenics because it fatally discriminates against those babies who fail
the test.
Pro-lifers have expressed concern that Mary Robinson is to head a
new project aimed at forcing governments to comply with their United
Nations treaty obligations in the area of human rights. Mrs Robinson
left her post as UN high commissioner for human rights yesterday and
announced that she would now be heading a project called the Ethical
Globalization Initiative from next month. Mrs Robinson has consistently
pushed for abortion to be recognised as a human right, and berated the
pro-life president of Costa Rica on this issue only a few days ago at
the world summit in Johannesburg. [
LifeSite, 11 September; see
digest for 6 September]
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