News, 20 November 2003
South Africa has made moves to further extend its liberal abortion laws
with the tabling of a draft Choice on Termination of Pregnancy
Amendment Bill, LifeSite reports. The new legislation would permit
nurses to carry out abortions and allow any health facility with a
24-hour maternity service to perform first trimester abortions. [
LifeSite, 18 November]
A Church of England curate has explained her reasons for taking legal
action over the late abortion of a baby with cleft palate. The Rev
Joanna Jepson, a Cambridge graduate, was born with cleft palate and had
corrective surgery as a teenager. She said: "We bend over backwards not
to discriminate (against people with disabilities) in society, yet when
it comes to the unborn we are seeing a level of eugenics in action. I
want to see the law tightened so that the eugenics agenda does not
become widely accepted or accepted at all." [
The Times, 20 November]
St Lucia's prime minister has called off parliamentary debate on a
proposal to allow abortion under certain circumstances, CNN reports.
When the government announced the proposals in September, hundreds of
Catholics gathered for a silent protest march. A petition has since
been handed over and the Church called for a day of prayer and fasting
this week in protest against any attempt to legalise abortion. [
CNN, 19 November]
The cabinet of Taiwan is considering proposals to ban sex selection
abortion, the Taipei Times reports. The policy change came about after
religious and women's groups reached a consensus on the subject during
private discussions. [
Beliefnet, 18 November]
The European parliament voted yesterday to back embryonic stem cell
research, increasing the chance that the moratorium on stem cell
research will be lifted next month. Ewa Okon-Horodynska, Polish deputy
minister for education commented: "Our system of values is totally
against this and there is no way we could morally agree with this kind
of research." [
FT, 20 November]
In a press release, the Commission of the Bishops' Conference of the
European Community stated: "We are deeply concerned by the European
Parliament's proposal to allow EU funding for research that will
involve the destruction of human embryos. The Parliament's proposal
would weaken the Commission's proposed ethical guidelines on EU funding
for human embryonic stem-cell research." [
COMECE, 19 November]
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