News, 5 September 2002
A minister in Northern Ireland's executive has praised the Brook
organisation at a celebration to mark the 10th anniversary of the
opening of a Brook advisory clinic in Belfast. Sinn Féin's Bairbre de
Brún, the pro-abortion minister for health, social services and public
safety, said that she was grateful to the staff and management of Brook
"for their excellent work in providing user-friendly sexual health
services for young people". Betty Gibson, chairman of SPUC Northern
Ireland, said: "Brook provides abortifacient morning-after pills and
offers advice on abortion at its Belfast clinic, despite the fact that
abortion is illegal in Northern Ireland and a large majority of the
population are pro-life. Furthermore, Brook's activities in Britain and
in Belfast have been a complete failure and a waste of tax-payers'
money because rates of teenage pregnancy and sexually transmitted
infections have rocketed." [
NI Executive press release, 4 September; SPUC Northern Ireland, 5 September]
A Scottish doctor who recovered from a coma is suing the hospital where
medical staff allegedly suggested that her life support should be
removed. Dr Fiona Smith, a general practitioner, claims that a
consultant at Dundee Royal Infirmary told her family that she was in a
persistent vegetative state (PVS) and that they should prepare
themselves to make a difficult decision. Dr Smith's condition improved
immediately after she was moved to St Mary's Hospital in Lanark, run by
the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul, and she emerged from
the coma three weeks later. Dr Smith may also consider mounting a legal
challenge to the Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act, a piece of
Scottish legislation which pro-lifers fear could be used to pave the
way for euthanasia. [
The Scotsman, 5 September]
The Roman Catholic bishops of 25 Latin American countries have
expressed concern that their governments are being pressured by
international organisations to legalise abortion. At the end of their
three-day conference in the Dominican Republic, the bishops warned that
the United Nations, the European Union and international
non-governmental organisations were putting South American countries
under pressure to legislate against life and the family. The
conference's final declaration, which is expected to reaffirm Catholic
teaching on the sanctity of human life, will be published by the
Vatican at a later date. [
AP, via Yahoo! News and
Northern Light, 5 September]
Public health officials in Bristol, western England, have complained
that they will be unable to provide enough free early abortions on the
National Health Service this year due to a lack of funds. Last year the
Avon Health Authority could only afford to pay for 53% of abortions in
the first 10 weeks of pregnancy, while the remaining 47% were either
delayed or performed privately. A spokesman for the Bristol North
Primary Care Trust, which assumed the role of the health authority in
April, has said that the situation will be little different this year.
Next year, all NHS primary care trusts will be obliged to offer free
abortions within three weeks of an initial request, and £1 million has
been set aside to help them meet this target. [
Bristol Evening Post, 3 September]
A group of pro-abortion doctors in the Irish Republic have urged the
country's Medical Council to allow them to refer women for abortions.
Doctors for Choice, which represents 100 Irish medics, also urged the
Council to stop regarding abortion as professional misconduct. The
calls were made in a submission to the Medical Council, which is
currently conducting a review of its code of ethics. [Irish
Independent, 5 September] The right to life of unborn babies is
constitutionally protected from the moment of conception in the
Republic of Ireland.
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