News, 19 March 2003
The Scottish parliament's petitions committee has agreed to act on a
petition about the lack of information provided to women before
abortions. The petition was presented by Ms Jane MacMaster, who works
with British Victims of Abortion to support women who suffer trauma as
a result of their decision to have an abortion. The committee will ask
the Executive, which exercises devolved governmental powers in
Scotland, for its comments on the adequacy and monitoring of
information provided about the potential mental and physical health
dangers of abortion, and will also seek clarification from the Royal
College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists as to whether it is
satisfied that its guidelines are being followed. [SPUC Scotland, 19
March]
A Kenyan official of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA),
one of the world's leading abortion promoters, has spoken out against
the legalisation of abortion in his country. Mr Coulibaly Sidiki, a
UNFPA country representative, criticised the Kenyan health minister's
support for legalised abortion [see
digest for 5 March]
and said that abortion was a criminal act which should not be legalised
in any circumstances. Mr Sidiki asserted: "We at UNFPA do not and will
never support abortion." [
East African Standard, 18 March]
However, UNFPA was one of the groups which participated in an
international conference of pro-abortionists held in Kenya in 1987
which agreed that "legal, good quality abortion services should be made
accessible to all women". UNFPA has distributed morning-after pills,
IUDs and manual abortion kits to refugees across the world, and
co-operates with coercive abortion programmes in China. [See
A Way of Life, SPUC, 2002]
A prominent Catholic expert in bioethics has said that it could be
morally permissible to extract organs or stem cells from unborn babies
who have died in spontaneous miscarriages. Professor Adriano Bompiani,
director of the Paul VI International Centre at the Catholic University
of the Sacred Heart in Rome, told a press conference at the
headquarters of Vatican Radio that the two necessary conditions were
that there must be explicit maternal consent, and that "there must be
no doubt whatsoever that the miscarriage was not provoked". [
Zenit, 13 March]
A Catholic priest in Quebec has announced that he would rather be
excommunicated than give up his support for abortion in certain
circumstances. In a letter to a local newspaper, Fr Claude Fluet of the
diocese of Valleyfield expressed his shock that "the most recalcitrant
sectors of the Catholic Church" had tried to prevent an abortion for a
nine-year-old rape victim in Nicaragua. Fr Fluet wrote: "If I am truly
wrong, I would prefer excommunication rather than renounce my
convictions." [
LifeSite, 18 March]
The mayor of New York City, who is a well known pro-abortionist, has
vetoed two bills designed to facilitate access to the abortifacient
morning-after pill. Mayor Michael Bloomberg blocked laws to require all
city hospitals to provide so-called emergency contraception to alleged
rape victims and to oblige pharmacies to display a sign stating that
they provided to drug in order to lessen the embarrassment of women who
wanted to ask for it. Other pro-abortionists were disappointed at the
vetoes, but the mayor claimed that the first bill was unnecessary and
the second was unenforceable. [
New York Post, 19 March]
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