News, 13 February 2003
The European parliament voted to adopt the pro-abortion Sandbæk report
today, after rejecting two pro-life amendments. No political grouping
asked for the report to be sent back to a committee, so MEPs debated
the report last night and voted on it at lunchtime today. The two
pro-life amendments 49 and 53 were both rejected: the first on a show
of hands; the second by 254 votes to 180 with 11 abstentions. The whole
report was then approved on a show of hands, which means there were no
roll-calls. The Council of Ministers is now likely to adopt the
regulation unchanged, which will mean that all member states of the
European Union will be compelled to fund abortion services and the
provision of abortifacient drugs in developing world countries. John
Smeaton, SPUC's national director, said: "Today's tragic vote
demonstrates a disrespect for the unborn and disregard for the rights
of individual nation states within Europe with pro-life laws." [SPUC,
13 February; see
SPUC media release and
digest for 11 February for further details]
A federal judge in Argentina has blocked the implementation of the
government's so-called 'sexual health and responsible procreation'
programme because it would involve the provision of abortifacients.
Judge Cristina Garzón de Lascano ordered the ministry of health and
social action to suspend the programme following a legal challenge by
the Women for Life group. Cristina González de Delgado, president of
Women for Life, said that the provision of abortifacient birth control
drugs violated the right to life of the unborn, the right to health of
women, and the rights of parents to take responsibility for their
children's education. She also claimed that the programme had been
imposed on Argentina by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.
[
Zenit, 12 February]
The judiciary committee of the US House of Representatives has passed a
bill to ban human cloning for all purposes. The legislation, sponsored
by Republican Dave Weldon and Democrat Bart Stupak, will now be debated
on the floor of the House in two weeks' time. Last year a similar bill
was passed by a large majority, and the same is expected this time
round. However, pro-cloning legislators may try to employ
obstructionist tactics to delay the measure in the US Senate. [Pro-Life
Infonet, 12 February]
Concerns have been expressed over the possible effects of soya on
the developing reproductive organs of male unborn babies. Researchers
at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health in the US fed pregnant
rats on a diet rich in genistein - a chemical found in soya - and
observed that their male offspring grew up to have enlarged prostate
glands and smaller testes. The urologists involved in the research were
concerned about the implications of their findings for humans and
advised pregnant women to avoid soya. [
BBC News online, 13 February]
New research has suggested that fathers bond with their unborn babies
even in the first three months of pregnancy. Researchers at Monash
University in Australia followed 116 first-time fathers during the
first trimester of pregnancy. Their findings, presented to the
conference of the Australian Institute of Family Studies, indicated
that some men became "emotionally and psychologically" involved at an
early stage, although others found the experience unsettling and needed
support. [
The Age, 12 February]
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