News, 27 May 2003
Clare Short, the former British Secretary of State for International
Development, has attacked SPUC for its claims about her support for
abortion and population control. In a letter to the Catholic Times in
response to SPUC's comment on her resignation from the British
government (see
SPUC release 12 May],
Ms Short said that SPUC's alleged suggestion that she or her former
department "support imposed abortion or population control is
defamatory" and "a complete lie". [Catholic Times, 25 May] SPUC
political spokesman Anthony Ozimic commented: "We will be publishing a
detailed account of our assessment of Ms Short's actions so that people
can judge for themselves who is being truthful."
An Argentine judge has banned the production and sale of oral
so-called contraceptive pills and intra-uterine devices (IUDs) on the
grounds that they are abortifacient. Cordoba province judge Cristina
Garzon de Lascano ruled last Thursday that such drugs and devices were
"abortive" and ordered the destruction of existing supplies. In
February, Judge Garzon de Lascano blocked the implementation of the
government's so-called 'sexual health and responsible procreation'
programme because it would involve the provision of abortifacients (see
digest for 13 February).
The Argentine health minister has described Thursday's ruling as
"absurd" and predicted that it would lead to a "health catastrophe". [
BBC, 24 May]
SPUC has pointed out that abortifacients are often unsafe for women and
always unsafe for any newly-conceived embryonic children, whose lives
are threatened by such drugs and devices (see
SPUC release, 20 May)
Both houses of the US Congress voted last Thursday against allowing
abortions to be performed on military bases. The US Senate voted 48
votes to 51 against such abortion provision, a rejection which had not
occurred since 1998. The House of Representatives voted 201 votes to
227 against such abortion provision, as it had every year since 1996.
[Information courtesy of the Congressional Pro-Life Caucus]
Swiss authorities are investigating recent cases of assisted suicide in
Switzerland. The Zurich public prosecutor's office says that it is
concerned about the speed with which the suicide organisation has
assisted in a number of recent cases. [
BBC, 27 May]
A baby has been born in South Africa after developing in its mother's
liver instead of in the womb. The new-born girl called Nhlahla, whose
name means "luck" in the Zulu language, is reported to be only the
fourth baby ever to survive such a pregnancy. Doctors report that both
mother and baby are doing well. This type of extra-uterine (outside the
womb) pregnancy is similar to, though much rarer, than standard ectopic
pregnancies, in which the newly-conceived embryo implants in the
fallopian tube instead of in the endometrium (the lining of the womb). [
BBC, 23 May]
A Florida judge has authorised doctors to perform an abortion on a 28
year old mentally disabled alleged rape victim. Miami circuit judge
Arthur Rothenberg last Friday also authorised doctors to sterilise the
mother and to take a DNA sample from the nearly six month old unborn
child in order to establish his or her paternity. The ruling was given
despite evidence from medical experts that there was no medical reason
for the abortion. [
AP/Worcester Telegram & Gazette, 23 May]
Dr Jack Willke, president of the International Right to Life
Federation, commented: "We do not kill innocent living human beings,
which is what the judge has allowed to be done here. I am also
concerned for the woman, because an abortion at six months' gestation
is far more dangerous to her life and health than a natural delivery.
Why is there this rush to kill the baby and endanger his or her mother,
when the child could so soon have a loving home to be adopted into?"
A new study has concluded that abortion may be a risk factor for
depression. The study, authored by Dr David Reardon of the Elliot
Institute for Social Sciences Research, Illinois, compared the outcome
for women of abortion versus delivery relative to depression. The study
employed data for 1,884 women who experienced their first pregnancy
event (abortion or childbirth) between 1980 and 1992. The study found
that women whose first pregnancies ended in abortion were 65% more
likely to score in the 'high-risk' range for clinical depression than
women whose first pregnancies resulted in a birth. [
Medical Science Monitor, 23 April] SPUC's sister organisation British Victims of Abortion (BVA) offers support to people suffering after an abortion.
An attempt by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) to suppress
advertisements critical of it has been rejected. Last month a global
coalition of pro-life and pro-family groups (including SPUC) sponsored
advertisements in CQ (Congressional Quarterly) Today detailing UNFPA's
complicity in coercive population control. Following UNFPA's request to
CQ Today to retract the advertisements, CQ Today obtained evidence from
the advertisement's authors, the Catholic Family and Human Rights
Institute (C-Fam), and CQ Today's legal advisors concluded that the
claims about UNFPA were substantiated. [
C-Fam Friday Fax, 23 May]
Further to Friday's (23 May) digest report regarding the Catholic
bishop of Worcester, Massachusetts, two more US Catholic bishops have
cancelled their appearances at college commencement ceremonies in
protest at the selection of pro-abortion speakers. Bishop James Timlin
of Scranton, Pennsylvania and Bishop Timlin's auxiliary bishop John
Dougherty cancelled their appearances at the University of Scranton and
College Misericordia, Pennsylvania, respectively following claims by
the
Cardinal Newman Society that journalists scheduled to speak at the ceremonies were pro-abortion. [
LifeSiteNews.com,
23 May]
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