News, 19 February 2003
A coalition of about 20 organisations in the UK, including charities
such as Mencap and Age Concern, has formed a new group called the
Making Decisions Alliance (MDA) to campaign for new legislation on the
treatment of mentally incapacitated adults in England and Wales.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4's 'You and Yours' programme today, a spokesman
for the MDA explained that they would be pushing for the carers of
mentally incapacitated adults to have a right to be consulted on a
patient's treatment, and for adults to be allowed to make legally
binding advance statements specifying how they should be treated if
they became incapacitated. Rosie Winterton, a government minister in
the Lord Chancellor's department, told the programme that work was
already underway on the drafting of a mental incapacity bill, but that
a twin-track approach would be adopted whereby groups such as the MDA
would be consulted on a code of practice to accompany the legislation.
[BBC Radio 4, 19 February] Pro-lifers are concerned that such
legislation could open the door to legalised euthanasia.
Pope John Paul II has said that abortion and the contraceptive
mentality are among the factors which are leading to the breakdown of
the family and the spread of AIDS in Africa. Addressing bishops from
The Gambia, Liberia and Sierra Leone in the Vatican, the Pope said: "A
fundamental element of African culture and civilisation has always been
the family ... a genuine Gospel of life and hope for humanity.
Unfortunately this Gospel of life, the source of hope and stability, is
being threatened in your countries by widespread polygamy, divorce,
abortion, prostitution, human trafficking and a contraceptive
mentality. These same factors contribute to irresponsible and immoral
sexual activity leading to the spread of AIDS, a pandemic which cannot
be ignored." [
Zenit, 18 February]
Pro-lifers in South America have warned that the case of a pregnant nine-year old rape victim in Nicaragua [see
digest for 17 February]
is being exploited by campaigners for the legalisation of abortion. The
parents of the girl, who is now 15 weeks pregnant, are asking the
government to sanction an abortion, and she was admitted to a hospital
yesterday for medical evaluation as a committee of experts decides
whether an abortion would be lawful. The leader of the Catholic Church
in Nicaragua, Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo of Managua, has said that
every effort should be made to save both the mother and her unborn
child, and has insisted that the Church considers abortion to be
murder. Meanwhile, the executive secretary of a Nicaraguan feminist
group has threatened to sue the government in the Inter-American Court
of Human Rights if it decides to refuse the abortion. [
Agencia EFE, via Northern Light, and
LifeSite, 18 February]
Members of the pro-life European Youth Alliance (EYA) have sent a card
to all members of the European parliament mourning the death of
Matilda, Australia's first cloned sheep. Matilda's sudden demise left
scientists puzzled because she had displayed no previous signs of
illness. The news of Matilda's death comes after last week's
announcement that Dolly the sheep, the world's first cloned mammal, had
died in Scotland. In a clear reference to the dangers inherent in all
cloning procedures, the EYA's card made the point that the technique
used to clone Dolly and Matilda is the same as that which would be used
to clone humans for both reproductive and so-called therapeutic
purposes. [EYA, 19 February]
The Health Professions Council of South Africa is asking that a
lifetime ban imposed on a doctor who failed to complete an abortion on
his girlfriend after at least 12 attempts over a period of 2 months be
reinstated. A high court judge ruled in November that Dr Dewald de
Bruin's lifetime ban should be reduced to a suspension of only three
months. After Dr de Bruin's final botched abortion attempt, his
girlfriend was taken home and had to pull out part of the dead baby
herself. [
The Star, South Africa, 19 February]
As feminists across the US marked the 183rd birthday of Susan B Anthony
last Saturday, pro-lifers pointed out that she was a staunch pro-life
activist as well as a leading figure in the women's suffrage movement.
Susan B Anthony wrote in 1869: "I deplore the horrible crime of child
murder... No matter what the motive, love of ease, or a desire to save
from suffering the unborn innocent, the woman is awfully guilty who
commits the deed." [
CNSNews, 17 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