News, 27 September 2002
The King of Nepal has signed a bill to legalise abortion up to 12 weeks
gestation and up to 18 weeks in the case of a pregnancy resulting from
rape or incest. The bill to legalise abortion in Nepal was first
introduced into the Nepalese parliament in 1996 and its drafting funded
by the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), the world's
largest abortion promoter. In March 2002 the bill was passed by the
parliament (see news digest for 18 March) and is now law. The Family
Planning Association of Nepal (FPAN) say they will "focus on ensuring
that [abortion] is made available to all ...irrespective of their age or
marital status." [IPPF News 27 September 2002].
A study by the pro-abortion Global Health Council has concluded
that abortion is the leading cause of maternal death around the world.
The study, conducted over a six-year period from 1995 to 2000, claims
that deaths from unsafe and unsanitary abortions average nearly 75,000
per year worldwide, out of a total of 200 million pregnancies each
year. Nils Daulaire, president of the Global Health Council, concluded
from the study that "if you want to end abortion, you have to end
unintended pregnancy". However, Fr. Thomas J. Euteneuer, president of
Human Life International, concluded instead that "countries need to
enforce existing laws and put abortionists in jail because they're
killing women" and questioned the study's impartiality because it was
funded by the pro-popualation control Packard Foundation. [
CNSNews.com, September 26, 2002]
A proposal to ban human cloning for reproductive purposes but to
allow destructive research on cloned human embryos has met strong
opposition at the United Nations this week. The proposal, made by the
French and German governments, is being opposed by over twenty nations,
most notably by other European Union (EU) countries. The Spanish
government opposes such a partial ban on cloning because it would
violate the 1999 European Convention on Human Rights and Biotechnology,
which states that the "production of a human embryo with the objective
of obtaining - through its destruction - embryonic stem cells, makes
research cloning an example of human embryo misuse.". Ireland and Italy
have argued that a partial ban would leave open the use of cloned human
embryos for reproductive purposes, while the Netherlands has called for
a five year moratorium on human experimental cloning. The Holy See and
the United States have also rejected a partial ban, the US delegation
describing the production and destruction of cloned human embryos as an
"affront to human dignity". [
Friday Fax, 27 September]
The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has admitted that it does
not monitor the 32 counties in China where it operates, and therefore
has no way of knowing if coercive abortion is practised. In an
interview last week with news bureau Knight Ridder, the head of UNFPA's
China programme Siri Tellier said: "We do not monitor every county."
Knight Ridder also stated that UNFPA "has no way to determine whether
local officials have abandoned coercive practices." UNFPA has in the
past claimed that its China program is one of the most monitored
programmes in the world. Steven W. Mosher, president of Population
Research Institute (PRI), which campaigns against population control,
commented: "UNFPA is supposed to be a watchdog, but it has become a lap
dog of the officials who implement China's one-child policy of forced
abortion. [
Population Research Institute (PRI), 24 September]
The governing body of the Channel Island of Guernsey has voted by over
two to one to investigate the legalisation of voluntary euthanasia.
Members of the House of Deliberation had been told by the board of
health and the advisory & finance committee that they should not
vote in favour of an investigation unless they were in favour of
changing the law. The States of Deliberation is responsible for making
Guernsey's laws, which must be approved by the UK's Privy Council. [
The Daily Telegraph, 27 September]
A leading North American feminist academic has condemned China's
one-child policy of forced abortion. In an article for US broadcaster
Fox News, Wendy McElroy, editor of ifeminists.com and a research fellow
for The Independent Institute in Oakland, California, criticised UNESCO
(United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) for
not officially condemning the one-child policy. Ms McElroy described
the one-child policy as "arguably the greatest bioethical atrocity on
the globe" and stated that the United Nations "has been complicit in
the slaughter". [
Fox News Views, 24 September]
Almost half of all university-based health clinics in the United States
were not offering students access to the abortifacient morning-after
pill in 1999. A study published in the Journal of American College
Health found that many clinics cited a lack of student interest and
objections from school officials for not offering the abortion-inducing
drug. [Reuters Health via IPPF News, 16 September 2002]
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