News, 2 June 2003
The Miami court ruling that a disabled woman should have her six-month
old child aborted and undergo sterilisation was carried out last
Thursday at the Jackson Memorial Hospital. The abortion went ahead in
spite of reports by Liberty Counsel that the woman had been persuaded
to have the baby and a request by an Orlando woman to be made the
unborn child's guardian. The woman's mother reportedly objected
strongly to any suggestion that the pregnancy continue after being told
by doctors that the woman's life would be in danger if the baby was
carried to term. However, the judge was informed by doctors
specialising in high-risk pregnancies that the baby appeared to be
developing normally and that there were no medical grounds for an
abortion. [
www.gainesvillesun.com and
Associated Press, May 30]
Philip Nitschke, the prominent Australian euthanasia campaigner, has
unveiled a suicide machine at a conference in Sydney organised by the
group 'Exit.' Dr Nitschke claims that his machine - a plastic carbon
monoxide-filled container with attached nasal tubes - will provide the
terminally ill with a humane and dignified way in which to end their
lives. However, opposition groups have condemned the invention as a
'blatant attack on the fundamental fabric of society'. Euthanasia was
legalised in the Northern Territory in 1996 for only two years before
the legislation was overturned by the federal government. [
BBC, May 31]
The Archbishop of Glasgow, Mario Conti, has joined Archbishop Peter
Smith in urging peers to oppose Lord Joffe's Patient (Assisted Dying)
Bill. In an open letter, Archbishop Conti warned that assisted dying is
'subversive of the implicit trust placed in the medical profession by
patients. To take this step would be to open a very dangerous breach in
the protective shield currently provided to the most vulnerable
citizens by British law.' He also reminded peers that 'we have a fine
tradition in this country of curing the sick and caring for those who
are terminally ill. This great tradition finds particular expression in
the hospice movement. It is in improving and enlarging our hospices,
not in practising euthanasia on the old, the vulnerable and the frail,
that we advance as a civilised nation.' [Catholic Communications
Service, 2 June]
MEP Dana Rosemary Scallon has criticised the Irish Government's
decision to oppose an amendment to a European directive that would ban
so-called 'therapeutic' cloning. Ms Scallon voiced dismay at the
Government's stance, stating that it conflicted with Irish
constitutional protection of the unborn. She was joined by Green Party
MEP Patricia McKenna, who stated: 'we would have thought that the
Government would have taken a very conservative view on something like
this given all the moral issues involved in Ireland around an issue
like this.' However, the Department of Health claimed that though the
Government disagreed with reproductive cloning, it was concerned that a
ban would jeopardise research into incurable diseases. [
The Irish Examiner, June 2]
A woman who recently aborted her 20-week-old unborn child after he was
diagnosed with Down's Syndrome has written about her experience in The
Guardian. She describes the screening procedure, her sense of disgust
at having to begin the abortion process herself through the taking of a
tablet and 'the ultimate betrayal' as her baby moved and kicked inside
her, unaware that he was about to die. Though the feature is broadly
defensive of eugenic abortion, the author goes on to describe the
negative effect it has had on her life; her antipathy towards pregnant
women, her sense of guilt at 'the terrible, dirty act' and her need, at
the sight of a Down's child, 'to explain myself and apologise a million
times over. Apologise for somehow doubting their right to be in this
world.' [
Guardian, May 31]
A derelict house in the Kingston borough of London is to be transformed
into flats for teenage mothers in partnership with the Richmond
Churches' Housing Trust. It is hoped that the scheme, which as well as
providing temporary housing will also offer young mothers information
on benefit entitlement and help with developing parenting and
housekeeping skills, will give teenage parents the opportunity to keep
their babies and to bring them up responsibly. Margaret Rooke, head of
Kingston's social services, explained, 'somebody will be here every day
to help the mums out with baby. Workers will also help them deal with
the anxiety many young people feel in this situation.' [
The Kingston Guardian, May 30]
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