News, 9 June 2003
Lord Joffe's bill to legalise euthanasia ran into stiff opposition
during a seven-hour debate at the House of Lords on Friday. In keeping
with convention, the bill was given its second reading unopposed but it
is unlikely to become law. In spite of widespread media support for the
bill, it is opposed by peers from all parties and from disability and
medical groups such as the British Medical Association, the Disability
Rights Commission and Help the Aged. [
The Telegraph, 7 June]
Peers on both sides of the debate commented on the overwhelming public
response they had received. Pro-euthanasia peer Lord Lester of Herne
Hill cited the 'passionate opposition from some quarters'. [
Hansard, 6 June] Aiding and abetting suicide is currently illegal in Britain and carries a jail sentence of up to fourteen years. [
Sky News, 6 June]
SPUC political spokesman Anthony Ozimic commented: "It is clear that
much lobbying by concerned individuals as well as by Christian, Jewish
and Muslim leaders played a key role in ensuring that the Bill was
strongly opposed during the debate."
Poland has voted in a nation-wide referendum to enter the European
Union. The electorate came out overwhelmingly in favour of entry after
a slow start on the first day of voting. [
The Times, 9 June].
Concerns have been raised about the EU draft constitution, which some
fear may render it impossible for member states to legislate on
abortion. Lech Kowalewski of Human Life International Poland, warned
that even though Polish domestic law protects the unborn, the country
had no guarantee from the EU that this would be safeguarded. "We have
no protection from the point of view of international law," he said,
"All we have is a declaration from our government and parliament that
our laws should be respected". [SPUC source]
The legislative director for the National Right to Life Committee
(NRLC) in Washington, USA, has criticised the publication of
'discredited myths on partial birth abortion' printed by The Guardian
newspaper last Friday. In emails sent to both the editor and the
journalist concerned, Douglas Johnson exposed the factually inaccurate
reporting of this method and its usage in an article 'US abortion ban
set stage for court battle' by Suzanne Goldenberg. She claimed that
partial birth abortion was 'a last resort used during the final stages
of pregnancy when the foetus is fatally malformed' and that it was
'only generally used for hydrocephalic babies'. However, Mr Johnson
pointed out that both these assertions were proven to be false as early
as 1997, when the director of a major association of abortion clinics
admitted that thousands of partial birth abortions were carried out
annually and that 'in the vast majority of cases, the procedure is
performed on a healthy mother with a healthy fetus.' He goes on to
state that, at the time of this revelation, a number of US newspapers
and broadcasters produced articles and programs accepting that earlier
claims about partial birth abortion had been false. The Guardian has
yet to respond to Mr Johnson's comments.
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