News, 10 April 2003
The House of Lords, Britain's highest court, has ruled that the BBC was
within its rights to refuse to broadcast a party election film by the
ProLife Alliance which depicted images of abortion on the grounds that
it was "grossly offensive". The law lords' 4-1 decision was announced
today, although the full text of the judgement will be released later.
The decision overturns an earlier ruling by three Appeal Court judges,
who accused the BBC of censorship [see digest for 14 March 2002]. A
spokesman for the ProLife Alliance said: "A nation justly weeps for the
terrible injuries inflicted on the Iraqi child who was maimed by war,
and his dramatic plight is pictured on the front pages of the media
worldwide. But the same compassionate nation is prohibited from seeing
the reality of the fate of the aborted unborn English child, massacred
every day in the United Kingdom, with figures now reaching beyond 6
million. Freedom of speech has always been the primary ingredient of
democracy. Democracy died today in the United Kingdom." [ProLife
Alliance, Guardian Unlimited and SPUC, 10 April]
The European parliament voted today in favour of a proposed
directive which would ban all human cloning, both for reproductive and
so-called therapeutic purposes, and restrict any research which
involves the destruction of surplus IVF embryos. The directive, based
on a report co-ordinated by German MEP Peter Liese, will have to be
voted on again and agreed by national governments before it can become
law, but pro-lifers are delighted by the clear message MEPs have sent
out to countries with permissive embryo research laws, especially the
UK. Paul Tully, SPUC's general secretary, said: "This is the third time
in as many years that MEPs have signalled their rejection of cloning
for experimental purposes, and again today they have acted to isolate
Tony Blair's government, whose support for destructive research on
cloned embryos is unique in Europe and makes Britain a pariah state on
the issue." [
BBC News online and
SPUC media release, 10 April]
Police in England have announced that no charges will be brought
against anyone involved in the assisted suicide of Reginald Crew in
January. Merseyside Police had launched an investigation into whether
Mrs Crew and others had broken the law by helping Mr Crew travel to
Zurich to kill himself with the help of a pro-suicide organisation, but
Norman Bettison, Merseyside's chief constable, now says that he is
"satisfied that there is no evidence to warrant prosecution of any
member of Reginald Crew's family, or any other person in connection
with his death". This is despite a well orchestrated campaign to
publicise his actions and the Swiss organisation. [
The Guardian, 10 April]
Catholics in Kenya are mobilising to ensure that abortion is not
legalised in the new constitution. The Church has been hosting
workshops to prepare more than 150 Catholic participants in the
National Constitutional Conference which gets underway on 28 April.
Catherine Waliaula of the Kenyan bishops' commission for justice and
peace said that provisions dealing with abortion were among those which
were important concerns for the Church. [
CNS, 9 April]
The state senate of Connecticut has passed a bill which would
extend legal protection to unborn children. The bill would establish a
penalty of up to 25 years in prison for anyone who assaulted a pregnant
woman if the assault resulted in the death of the woman's unborn child.
The legislation, which will now move to the House of Representatives,
has been nicknamed 'Jenny's Bill' after a pregnant woman called Jenny
McMechen who was murdered in 2001. Her killer was charged with murder,
but no charges could be brought over the death of her unborn child
because the state did not recognise a foetus as a person. [
ctnow.com, 10 April]
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