News, 24 September 2002
A bill to legalise abortion in the Philippines has been hit by a lack
of political support. A forum in Baguio City to promote the bill was
attended by only one local official. Moreover, two of the bill's
co-authors have now withdrawn their authorship, while efforts to find
co-authors in the senate have run into difficulties. [
Inquirer News Service, 24 September]
It is reported that Robbie Williams, the British singing star, was so upset about the abortion of his unborn child [see
yesterday's digest]
that he named the child Grace and wrote a song about her which was
included on one of his albums. The Sun newspaper quotes a friend of
Robbie Williams as saying: "Robbie thinks about the unborn baby a lot.
He always thought it would be a girl called Grace and wrote a song
about it on one of his albums. She would be three now." [
The Sun, 24 September]
A decision to allow a deaf couple in Victoria, Australia, to screen out
their IVF embryos who might also be deaf has been criticised by a
prominent ethicist. The couple in question want to conceive embryos
through IVF and then use pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) to
screen out those with a certain gene that causes deafness in one in
four carriers. Nick Tonti-Filippini said that the state government's
decision was "horrible on a number of levels" because it discriminated
against deaf people, could pave the way for PGD to be used to screen
out those with many other genetic conditions, and should at least have
been debated in parliament. [
news.com.au, 21 September]
The Roman Catholic archbishop of Toronto has delighted pro-lifers by
strongly condemning abortion during the Mass which preceded a
controversial dinner event for Catholic lawyers. Canadian pro-lifers
had expressed concern that Cardinal Aloysius Ambrozic was planning to
attend the dinner despite the fact that Joe Clark, a pro-abortion
former prime minister, was due to give the keynote address [see
digest for 18 September].
In the event, Cardinal Ambrozic did not attend the dinner but
celebrated the Mass beforehand and used his homily to speak of "the
suffering of the babies who are being aborted". With Mr Clark sitting
in the front pew, the cardinal said: "Somehow the people who are
pro-abortion ... think that somehow [unborn babies] don't feel the
horrible pain that accompanies every death." [
LifeSite, 20 September]
Research carried out in the US has indicated that children whose
mothers have a history of abortion are more prone to behavioural
problems and experience less emotional support at home that children of
mothers who have not had an abortion. Dr Priscilla Coleman, lead author
of the study which appears in the Journal of Child Psychology and
Psychiatry, noted that the results "were not all that surprising when
considered in light of previous research linking unresolved grief
associated with other forms of perinatal loss, such as miscarriage and
stillbirth, to compromised parenting". [
Elliot Institute, 18 September]
A federal appeals court in the US has upheld a state law in South
Carolina which requires abortion clinics to make clergy available for
counselling. A panel of the 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals voted by
two to one to overturn the ruling of a lower court that the law
violated the separation of church and state in the US constitution. [
AP, via freedomforum.org, 20 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