News, 5 March 2003
The government of Kenya is to launch a public debate on abortion with a
view to decriminalising it. Mrs Charity Ngilu, Kenya's health minister,
told a pro-abortion meeting: "I personally feel the continued denial of
women to make free choice on their reproductive health life is wrong
and should be reformed to allow that freedom." [
East African Standard, 4 March]
Kenya's present abortion law is based on the Offences Against the
Person Act 1861, passed by the UK parliament when Kenya was part of the
British empire. Christian and Muslim leaders in the country are united
in opposition to the legalisation of abortion in the draft text of the
proposed new constitution.
The director general of the International Planned Parenthood
Federation (IPPF), the world's largest promoter of abortion, has
alluded to the eugenicist implications of his organisation's philosophy
in a speech to Nordic pro-abortionists. Dr Steven Sinding recommended
that supporters "[d]emonstrate the cost-effectiveness of sound sexual
and reproductive health programmes, in terms of Disability Adjusted
Life Years (DALYs)". Anthony Ozimic of SPUC commented: "The most
notable defenders of DALY-type models, Dr. Peter Singer and Dr Helga
Kuhse, also believe that abortion is sometimes morally obligatory and
infanticide can be a morally acceptable proposal. IPPF's attempt to
endorse the abortion agenda through the DALY model smells of eugenic
population control." [SPUC, 5 March]
An 85-year-old retired nurse in England has stirred the debate on
appropriate treatment for elderly and seriously ill people by having
the words "Do Not Resuscitate" tattooed across the front of her chest.
Frances Polack explained that she had taken the measure in case doctors
did not find her so-called living will stating her wishes not to be
resuscitated in the event of cardiac arrest. [
BBC News online, 5 March]
A judge in Canada has allowed a so-called wrongful life suit to proceed
in a case which could set a precedent for future actions. The mother of
a child, who was born with severe physical and mental disabilities, is
suing doctors on the basis that she would have aborted her daughter had
she been told about the child's condition. The case is being pursued in
the name of the child herself, but the mother is seeking damages for
the costs, suffering and loss of enjoyment of life resulting from the
birth. Justice Eric Macklin of the Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta
remarked that the proceedings would determine a "neat question of law".
[
LifeSite, 4 March]
The pro-abortion attorney general of New York state has bowed to
pressure from pro-lifers and has withdrawn from a dinner event
organised by the Friendly Sons of St Patrick celebrating Irish-American
heritage. Eliot Spitzer said that he had withdrawn "out of respect for
the organisers" after the American Life League mounted a campaign
against his appearance. A spokesman for the ALL welcomed the news,
saying that the attorney general's very presence would have been an
insult to Irish Catholics. [
IOL, 28 February]
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