News, 7 March 2003
Some of the most prominent pro-abortionists in the UK have been
appointed to the British government's Independent Advisory Group on
Sexual Health and HIV. Hazel Blears, the public health minister,
announced yesterday that the chairman of the new body will be Baroness
Joyce Gould, who is also president of the pro-abortion Family Planning
Association (FPA) and chairman of the All Party Pro Choice Group in
parliament. One of the two vice chairmen of the group will be Anne
Weyman, currently chief executive of the FPA. Other appointments
include Ian Jones, chief executive of the British Pregnancy Advisory
Service (Britain's largest private abortion provider), Helen Axby,
deputy chief executive of Marie Stopes International (a major promoter
and provider of abortion around the world) and Jan Barlow, chief
executive of the pro-abortion Brook Advisory Services. [
Department of Health, 6 March]
It has emerged that one of the most senior cardinals in the Catholic
Church personally intervened in an effort to protect a nine-year-old
rape victim and her unborn child from abortion in Nicaragua. Cardinal
Alfonso López Trujillo, president of the Pontifical Council for the
Family, wrote to Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo, archbishop of Managua,
to request that every effort be made to comfort "the innocent victims
of such an execrable event". Cardinal López Trujillo went on to stress
that "every innocent human being is absolutely equal to all others in
the right to life" and that "the painful circumstances of this
pregnancy, even though serious and dramatic ... can never justify the
deliberate elimination of an innocent human being". [
Zenit, 6 March]
The health ministers of Ghana, Mozambique and Namibia were among the
participants at a conference on unsafe abortion hosted by the
International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) in Kenya this week.
Prominent pro-abortionist Dr Eunice Brookman-Amissah, head of the
African Alliance for Women's Reproductive Health and Rights, told the
conference that between four and five million African women had unsafe
abortions every year, resulting in as many as 30,000 maternal deaths.
Her suggested solution was to abolish restrictive abortion laws
inherited from former colonial powers. [
Health24, 7 March]
There is no firm data to support these figures. It is the usual
practice of pro-abortion advocates to present spurious claims about
un-safe / illegal abortion in support of demands for abortion to be
promoted.
Today marks the first anniversary of the announcement that the
people of Ireland had voted in a referendum to reject the government's
proposal to weaken the constitutional protection of unborn life. In the
final analysis, the proposal was defeated by 50.42% to 49.58%, a margin
of only 10,556 votes. The result was welcomed by SPUC and other
pro-life groups in Ireland and around the world because the proposals
would have weakened protection for all unborn children, especially
pre-implantation embryos. [See
digest for 7 March 2002;
final results from ireland.com]
It is reported that trials on a medical abortion pill [presumably
RU-486] are underway at the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences
with a view to making the drug available in the family welfare system.
Sushma Swaraj, minister of health and family welfare, has inaugurated a
national consortium to seek a national consensus on how to introduce
the drug on prescription for abortions up to the 20th week of
pregnancy. [The Hindu, 6 March] RU-486 is already available in India
and is strongly supported by the government [see
digest for 22 October 2002].
Dr Philip Nitschke, the prominent Australian campaigner for euthanasia,
is taking time out from a speaking tour around New Zealand to support a
woman charged with the attempted murder of her sick mother in 1999.
Meanwhile, members of New Zealand's parliament are to debate euthanasia
over the next month after a private member's bill on the issue was
drawn from a ballot. [
xtramsn news, 7 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