News, 17 April 2003
The Catholic bishops of Scotland have said that Catholic voters in the
forthcoming elections to the Scottish parliament on 1 May must consider
the stands of the political parties on moral issues including abortion.
In a letter to be sent to all parishes in Scotland, the bishops say
that Catholics should exercise their right to vote but that this "must
be done in accord with one's conscience formed by the teachings of the
Church". It is reported that the guidance could affect the number of
votes cast for the Scottish Socialist Party, which courts Catholic
support but which campaigns for easier availability of the
abortifacient morning-after pill. [
The Scotsman online and
BBC News online, 16 April]
One of Britain's leading medical scientists has said that heart disease
and other illnesses could begin in the earliest stages of life in the
womb. Professor David Barker, head of the Medical Research Council's
epidemiology unit at Southampton University, also said that a good
maternal diet before and during pregnancy could protect an unborn child
from heart attacks, stroke or diabetes in later life. In his new book
entitled "The Best Start in Life", Professor Barker observes that a
maternal diet high in proteins and low in carbohydrates could create
problems for the embryo, and that there is "a clear link between thin
women and the way their babies handle sugar". [
Guardian, 10 April]
Police in the Philippines have arrested six women on suspicion of
committing abortions. The director of the National Police Criminal
Investigation and Detection Group announced that the six women as well
two suspected accomplices were arrested during an entrapment operation
at a clandestine abortion clinic in Obando. Performing an abortion is
strictly forbidden in the Philippines and is punishable by up to 12
years in prison, but the head of the Police division for the concerns
of women and children complained that sentences were often very light
and urged legislators to declare abortion to be a heinous crime. [
ABS-CBN News, 12 April]
The state of South Dakota is appealing against a federal judge's
decision to overturn two state laws on abortion which date back to 1973
- the year in which the US Supreme Court declared a constitutional
right to abortion in the case of Roe v Wade. The laws, which banned
abortions in clinics after the first trimester, were successfully
challenged last year by Planned Parenthood. [
AberdeenNews.com, 17 April]
The authorities in Nepal are considering the fate of 50 women currently
in prison for procuring abortions who were sentenced before the
abortion law was liberalised last September. Women's rights activists
have called on the government to declare a general amnesty for the
prisoners, especially because all those currently imprisoned for
abortion-related crimes are women. [
LifeSite, 16 April;
Spotlight Weekly, Nepal, 11 - 17 April]
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