News, 25 March 2003
The United Nations body responsible for monitoring relief needs and
providing humanitarian support services in Ethiopia has suggested that
an aggressive population control programme (rather than food aid) is
what is needed to solve the country's problems. The Emergencies Unit
for Ethiopia, a project of the UN Development Programme, has
recommended that "all appropriate means should be explored to stop the
ongoing population explosion" in Ethiopia, including a "reward and
punishment" system to restrict family size. [
allAfrica.com, 20 March;
LifeSite, 24 March]
Aggressive population control policies often mean that women are put
under pressure to have abortions. They can also lead on to coercive
abortion schemes, such as that operated in China with the assistance of
the UN Population Fund (UNFPA).
The Clonaid company has published a photograph of one of the five
cloned babies it claims to have produced. The company says that the
baby, who is photographed in an incubator allegedly in Japan, is the
third of five clones born between December and February. There has
still been no independent confirmation that the five babies are really
clones or even exist at all, but Brigitte Boisselier, Clonaid's
director and a bishop in the Raelian cult, promised to produce evidence
within the next few days. [
BBC News online, 25 March]
Researchers in Italy have warned that exposure to cannabis in the womb
might cause learning difficulties and hyperactivity. A team at the
University of Cagliari injected a group of pregnant rats with a
quantity of cannabinoid equivalent to a low to moderate daily dose of
cannabis in humans, and compared the offspring to those of rats who had
not been injected with the drug. They found that the offspring of the
injected rats were significantly more hyperactive in infancy, and
scored lower on learning tests throughout their lives. It is thought
that exposure to cannabis in the womb disrupts the transmission of
nerve impulses between brain cells. [
BBC News online, 25 March]
The abortion-related death of a student in Fiji has led to calls for a
clarification of the law on abortion. A prominent doctor in under
police custody in the capital Suva after one of his patients apparently
died as a result of complications following an abortion and the fact
that she was left unattended overnight. Reports suggest that abortion
has become quite common among university students in Fiji, despite the
fact that Fiji's abortion laws are officially quite restrictive. The
Fiji Women's Rights Movement has called for abortion to be allowed on
demand. [Fijilive, 25 March:
report 1 and
report 2]
Under Fiji's penal code, abortion is forbidden with the exception of
when it is considered necessary to save the mother's life. However, the
supreme court ruled in 1976 that this exception extended to a woman's
mental and physical health, a which can be interpreted to justify
virtually any abortion.
A number of countries in Latin America, as well as pro-lifers
across the world, are marking the annual Day of the Unborn. The date
coincides with the Solemnity of the Annunciation in the Roman Catholic
calendar, the day on which Catholics celebrate the incarnation of Jesus
Christ as a tiny embryo in the womb of the Virgin Mary. Argentina,
Nicaragua and Guatemala are among the countries to have officially
declared 25 March the Day of the Unborn, while the Knights of St
Columbus, a Catholic lay group, are promoting the occasion in the US.
[SPUC, 25 March]
It is reported that so-called informed consent laws to restrict
access to abortion have been, or are, before the legislatures of 23
American states this year. Previously passed informed consent laws are
also being challenged in the courts in at least three other states. All
the measures ensure that women who request an abortion are offered
information related to the procedure, such as foetal development and
the alternatives to abortion, during a waiting period of about 24 hours
before the abortion can go ahead. Mary Spaulding Balch, director of
state legislation for the National Right to Life Committee, said that
the measures were highly effective because "when a woman sees there is
a 'better way', many times she will choose it". [
CNS, 21 March]
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