News, 4 September 2002
4 September 2002
Pro-lifers have welcomed the outcome of the United Nations world summit
on sustainable development in Johannesburg. Agreement on the summit's
plan of implemetation was finally reached at 1.30 this morning, and
pro-lifers were pleased that the inclusion of pro-abortion language was
successfully resisted. While paragraph 47 of the plan refers to "human
rights and fundamental freedoms", the reference to "national laws and
cultural and religious values" makes it extremely difficult to
interpret the paragraph as supporting a right to abortion. Peter Smith,
SPUC's delegate at the summit, said that the negotiations had been hard
but that, while pro-lifers had gained a little, pro-abortionists had
gained nothing and a lot of proposed language supporting abortion had
been blocked. Furthermore, the US and certain other countries are
expected to issue strongly-worded reservations at the close of the
summit today insisting that nothing in the plan of implematation can be
interpreted as implying a right to abortion. [SPUC, 4 September]
Young European pro-lifers have criticised the mayor of Brussels in
Belgium for hosting a reception in the town hall for participants in an
international pro-euthanasia meeting. A conference on 'Euthanasia and
the Law' for pro-euthanasia doctors organised by the World Federation
for the Right to Die in Dignity is starting tomorrow in the Belgian
capital, but members of the European Youth Alliance have been refused
permission to hold a pro-life awareness event outside the town hall
during the mayor's reception. [EYA media release, 4 September]
Pro-lifers in countries belonging to the European Union are being
urged to contact their government minister with responsibility for
research ahead of the final decision on EU funding for destructive
embryonic research later this month. Euro-Fam reports that the EU's
council of ministers will decide on the specific programmes or projects
to be funded under the general Sixth Framework Programme for research
on 30 September, although the Danish presidency of the council is
proposing the adoption of these specific projects before detailed
ethical guidelines are drawn up. This is regarded by pro-lifers as a
trap because the European Commission will then be able to select which
projects receive funding according to its criteria, which do not
exclude embryo research. Euro-Fam insists that the Danish proposal
should only be accepted if destructive research on embryos is
explicitly excluded. [
Euro-Fam, 31 August]
Israel's Council for Demography is to examine the country's abortion
rate as it draws up policy guidelines for increasing the Jewish birth
rate. Shlomo Benizri, the Israeli labour and social welfare minister,
has reconvened the council after five years of inactivity in order to
address various demographic issues. Mr Benizri is known to oppose
abortion, as is Dr Baruch Levy, the council's chairman, who believes
that education is the key to reducing the abortion rate. [
Ha'aretz Daily, 4 September] About 13% of known pregnancies in Israel end in registered abortions.
The Vatican's top communications official has said that Catholics must
speak out corageously against immoral acts such as abortion. Archbishop
John P Foley, President of the Pontifical Council for Social
Communications, warned that many people were afraid of speaking out
against abortion and other immoral acts "because it could be considered
offensive in our increasingly tolerant society". However, the
archbishop insisted that Christians "are obliged to speak the truth, in
season and out of season, even when it is 'politically incorrect.'" [
CNS News, 3 September]
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