News, 23 September 2002
Belgium has become the second country in the world after the
Netherlands to legalise euthanasia since the fall of Nazi Germany. The
final stage in the passage of Belgium's euthanasia law, which was
passed by parliament in May, happened at the end of last week when the
government established a permanent committee to monitor its
implementation. This committee will meet tomorrow to approve an
official form which doctors must complete when they perform euthanasia.
Under the law, euthanasia can be carried out on terminally ill patients
who have requested it as long as certain legal procedures are followed.
The Catholic Church in Belgium has condemned the law, although a
majority of the population appear to support it. [Daily Telegraph and
Ananova, 23 September]
The leader of the Catholic Church in Peru has denounced the
abortifacient morning-after pill. Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani,
archbishop of Lima and primate of Peru, described use of the
morning-after pill as a crime and "an attack on life" because it caused
a chemical abortion. The cardinal made his comments at a conference on
bioethics attended by Fernando Carbone, Peru's health minister. Mr
Carbone has been criticised in some circles for basing the country's
family planning policies on Catholic teaching. It was he who suspended
distribution of morning-after pills at public clinics. [
Agencia EFE, 20 September; via Northern Light]
The widower of Diane Pretty, the motor-neurone disease sufferer whose
legal bid for a right to be helped to die was thrown out in the courts,
has handed a petition calling for a right to die to No.10 Downing
Street, the official residence of the British prime minister. The
petition contained 50,000 names, including 10,000 collected over the
internet. Mr Pretty is now leading a nationwide campaign for assisted
suicide called UK Act Now. Rachel Hurst, director of Disability
Awareness in Action, warned that any change in the law would be "very
wrong" and would lead to a "slippery slope" affecting even those who
did not want to die. [
BBC and
Sky News, 23 September]
A popular British singer has revealed that she was suicidal after her
abortion. In a book to be published next month, Nicole Appleton, a
former member of the group called All Saints, reveals that she aborted
a baby conceived with Robbie Williams, another popular British singing
celebrity. Ms Appleton claims that she had the abortion against Robbie
Williams' wishes, and writes: "The abortion must have symbolised
everything [Robbie] hated about how this business can control your
life. It so overwhelmed me that he had lost his child. I wanted to weep
and weep." [
BBC Radio 1 News, 23 September;
Ananova, 21 September]
It has emerged that the Canadian federal government is fining the
province of Nova Scotia a sum of $39,000 a year for refusing to pay the
full cost of abortions in private clinics. A total of four Canadian
provinces refuse to fund the total cost of private abortions, but a
spokesman for Health Canada explained that Nova Scotia had been singled
out because it had made commitments to fund private abortions in full.
All Canadian provinces fund abortions in public hospitals, although
Prince Edward Island insists that publicly funded abortions can only
take place in another province. [
LifeSite, 20 September]
California has become the first American state to establish a legal
regulatory framework for destructive embryonic stem cell research.
Pro-abortion governor Gray Davis signed legislation yesterday which
allows the use of state funds for destructive research programmes and
requires IVF fertility clinics to inform clients about the option of
donating their spare embryos to research. Governor Davis said that the
law meant that California was "perfectly positioned to be a world
leader in this area". It is reported that the move could set the stage
for a showdown with the US federal government and Congress. [
Mercury News and
SFGate, 23 September]
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