News, 26 August 2003
A Pennsylvania judge has upheld the conviction of a women convicted of
third-degree murder after she attacked her husband's pregnant
girlfriend and caused her to suffer a miscarriage. Corinne Wilcott, who
attacked the woman after a graduation party, is serving a 7-20 year
prison sentence. Pennsylvania is one of more than 24 states with foetal
homicide laws. [
telegram.com, 22 August]
Terri Schiavo, a severely disabled woman at the centre of a highly
charged legal battle, has been admitted to hospital in a critical
condition for the second time in 10 days. Last Friday, the Florida
Supreme Court refused to hear her case, a decision which allows a local
judge to set a date for ending her life through dehydration. The family
are said to be 'completely devastated' by the decision and hope that
governor Jeb Bush will intervene to prevent the removal of her feeding
tube. [
LifeNews.com, 23 and
25 August]
An experimental treatment for Parkinson's disease using tissue from
aborted foetuses has caused over half of the patients involved to
develop irreversible severe and uncontrollable limb movements, LifeSite
reports. However, Dr Thomas Freeman of the University of South Florida
who co-authored the study, said that 'cell therapies are coming closer
and closer to being useful'. Two years ago, a similar study showed that
the treatment had "disastrous side effects", prompting researchers to
move away from such treatments altogether. [
LifeSite, 25 August]
The professor of Cancer Studies at the University of Wales College of
Medicine has put the case against the pro-euthanasia Patient (Assisted
Dying) Bill currently being debated in the UK Parliament. Dr Tim
Maughan reflects that many of his patients go through periods of
depression or a sense of hopelessness, either at the time of diagnosis
or as their illness develops, but this is temporary and the patient
usually pulls through and accepts the situation. He fears that if
euthanasia is legalised, many of these patients would be helped to die
and that the new law would be widely open to abuse. [
The Western Mail, 25 August]
The Kentucky Supreme Court has overturned two "wrongful life" lawsuits,
LifeNews.com reports. The lawsuits were filed against doctors by
parents who claimed that they would have aborted their children if they
had known that they were suffering from physical disabilities and were
denied the opportunity to do so. The two Kentucky judges said that the
idea of 'wrongful life' was reminiscent of Nazi Germany and that the
lawsuits were examples of discrimination against those with physical
disabilities. [
LifeNews.com, 26 August]
The former Singapore health minister has been put in charge of a
committee to boost family size after figures revealed the lowest
national birth rate in 26 years. Economic reasons have been cited for
the decline but the chairman of Family Matters! Singapore, Chan Soo
Sen, commented that programmes offering financial incentives for having
more children have largely failed and that, for many, having children
comes second to building a successful career. [
Australasianbioethics.org, 20 August]
Hopes have been raised that Peru's coercive population control
policies may come to an end after the congressional Health, Population
and Family Commission elected a pro-life president. Hector Chavez, who
presided over the commission that accused President Fujimori of
violating the human rights of women through forced sterilisation
campaigns, was elected after heated debate. [
Zenit, 24 August]
A disability rights commissioner who is herself severely disabled has
asked for better care for the disabled rather than legal euthanasia. In
an article entitled Choose Life, Jane Campbell criticises the negative
portrayal of disabled people's lives as 'tragic' or 'burdensome' and
states that what is needed is not an assisted dying bill but an
assisted living bill which ensured that people with disabilities
received essential services. She writes of being hospitalised with
severe pneumonia and refusing to sleep for 48 hours because doctors
assumed that she would not want to be treated if she lost
consciousness. She concludes: "Without our lives being seen as having
equal value, any attempt legally to sanction hastening our death will
exacerbate a culture that fears incapacity so much that it wants to
extinguish it." [
The Guardian, 26 August]
Russia has restricted legal abortion for the first time in decades, the
New York Times reports. Since 1955, when Stalin's ban on abortion was
lifted, Russia has had some of the most liberal abortion laws in the
world, with abortion commonly used as a form of birth control. New laws
restrict some abortions to 12 weeks though abortions can still be
obtained after the time limit on grounds such as severe disability,
rape or death of husband. "It's a first step," said Aleksandr C.
Chuyev, a member of the lower house of Parliament who plans to sponsor
a bill granting the unborn child the same rights as a born child. [
The New York Times, 23 August]
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