News, 5 February 2003
A nursing magazine has claimed that most nurses think the law against
assisting suicide "should possibly be changed" on the basis of a
web-site survey. However, there is no suggestion that the web-site
selected respondents or restricted responses to nurses, and the survey
appears to have been conducted in the wake of well-publicised reports
of fears of prosecution by the wife of suicide Reginald Crew. [
Nursing Times, 5 February]
The report was slated by SPUC, who pointed out that it was misleading
to represent such a straw poll as a valid survey of opinion in the
profession and irresponsible to suggest that the protection of the law
against assisting suicide should be changed.
A candidate for the post of governor of Edo State in Nigeria has
vowed to 'wage war on abortion and all forms of destruction of life' if
he wins the election [in April]. Senator Rowland Owie of the All
Nigerian People's Party plans to establish 'Homes of Innocence' in each
of the state's three senatorial districts where young girls facing
unwanted pregnancies would be given help to have their babies and go
back into education or training. He said: "Our government will be
opposed to abortion; nobody has the right to take life." [
This Day, Lagos, 4 February; via allAfrica.com]
Pope John Paul II has said that society must protect the weak and
respect the inviolable dignity of human life. In his message for the
11th World Day of the Sick in Washington DC next week, the Pope warned
that "a model of society appears to be emerging in which the powerful
predominate, setting aside and even eliminating the powerless" through
abortion and euthanasia. Noting that it remained "a fundamental precept
that life is to be protected and defended, from its conception to its
natural end", the Pope rejected procedures or experiments which failed
to respect this precept, and affirmed that "it will never be
permissible to resort to actions or omissions which by their nature or
in the intention of the person acting are designed to bring about
death". [
Zenit, 4 February]
A political party for elderly people which plans to contest the
Scottish parliamentary elections in May has an official policy in
favour of the "right to die". The Pensioners Party of Scotland believes
that pensioners should be given the right to die with dignity, and to
"choose, within the law, when and where death should take place".
[Evening News, 4 February]
The United Nations population division has revised downwards its
prediction of the worldwide fertility rate in 2050 to below replacement
level. The UN's biannual report on international population trends for
2000 predicted that the average fertility rate in 2050 would be 2.1,
but the report for 2002, which is due to be published shortly, predicts
that the rate will have fallen to 1.85 - just above the current average
in Western countries. By 2075, the world's population could have shrunk
by half a billion. [Sunday Times, 2 February] The overpopulation myth
is used to justify coercive population control policies and the
continued existence of the pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund
(UNFPA). Each year, tens of millions of unborn children are killed by
abortion around the world.
A South African pro-lifer has pointed out that the Choice on
Termination of Pregnancy Act 1996, which came into effect six years ago
[see
yesterday's digest],
provides for abortion on demand for women and girls of all ages and not
just those over 16. The law states that pregnant minors (those under
18) must be advised by a medic to consult with parents, a guardian,
family members or friends before an abortion goes ahead, but that an
abortion must not be denied if the minor chooses not to consult them.
Furthermore, a quarter of all abortions in South Africa are performed
after the 12th week of pregnancy, despite technically tighter grounds
for abortions beyond the first trimester. [SPUC, 5 February; thanks to
Margrit Sokolic, secretary of Pro-Life in South Africa]
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