News, 26 February 2003
The Union of Students in Ireland (USI) is participating in a campaign
launched by the Irish Crisis Pregnancy Agency (CPA) to provide women
who face unplanned pregnancies with information on the alternatives to
abortion. Maureen Woods, the USI's welfare officer, said that many
Irish college students had abortions in England because they made a
panic decision and were not aware of other options, while Olive
Braiden, chairperson of the CPA, said that over a third of women who
had abortions in Britain did not contact any doctor or agency in
Ireland for counselling beforehand. The 'Positive Options' campaign
will involve a website as well as leaflets and posters which will be
distributed in colleges by the USI. The material will provide contact
details for both pro-life and pro-abortion bodies. [
Irish Examiner, 26 February]
The English high court ruled this morning that a black man whose sperm
was mistakenly used to fertilise a white woman's eggs at an IVF clinic
in Leeds is the legal father of the resulting twins. However, Dame
Elizabeth Butler Sloss did not award custody of the twins to the father
and said that he would have to apply to adopt his children if this was
what he wanted. [
BBC News online, 26 February]
A spokesman for SPUC commented: "This case highlights the potential for
mistakes and mix-ups with IVF treatment, but the very fact that such
mix-ups are possible is indicative of the corrupt nature of IVF - a
practice which had led to the commodification of human life on a
massive scale."
The Catholic bishops of Nicaragua have condemned draft legislation
to liberalise the country's abortion law. In a statement issued on
Monday, the bishops reaffirmed their commitment "to defend the life of
the unborn from the moment they are conceived" and demanded that
lawmakers refrain from legislating "in favour of crime". Comparing the
violence of the abortion procedure with the impact of a bomb on a bus
full of passengers, the bishops warned: "If an innocent creature
absolutely incapable of defending himself is killed, then robbery,
genocide, drug trafficking and terrorism could be irresponsibly
justified." [
Zenit, 25 February;
Houston Chronicle, 26 February]
It has emerged that the Irish attorney general refused a request to
apply the constitutional right to life of the unborn to prevent a home
delivery in the case of a breech birth. Dr Declan Keane, master of the
National Maternity Hospital in Dublin, asked Michael McDowell, attorney
general at the time, to oblige the pregnant woman in question to have a
Caesarean section in hospital rather than give birth at home because a
home delivery would put the unborn child's life at risk. It is unclear
why Mr McDowell refused the request, although in the event the child
was delivered by Caesarean section anyway. [Irish Independent, 26
February]
Slovakia and the Vatican are drawing up a bilateral agreement
which would ensure that doctors had a right to refuse to carry out
abortions. The document dealing with conscientious objection would
recognise the rights of Slovak citizens to abstain from participation
in abortion, as well as euthanasia and embryo experimentation should
they be legalised. Slovakia currently has a liberal abortion law, but
the country's constitutional court is due to rule in April whether a
clause in the constitution which protects human life extends to the
unborn. [
LifeSite, 24 February] Slovakia is one of the 10 countries invited to join the European Union next year.
The leader of Roman Catholics in Cuba has criticised the country's
alarmingly high abortion rate. Cardinal Jaime Ortega Alamino,
archbishop of Havana, issued a pastoral letter on Monday which
criticised many aspects of the present regime, including the high
abortion rate and the erosion of Cuba's Christian heritage. [
EFE, 25 February; via Northern Light] Cuba has one of the highest abortion rates in the world and is the only Latin American country with a liberal abortion law.
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