News, 24 November 2003
The House of Lords Liaison Committee has recommended the setting up of
a select committee to consider assisted dying, ten years after the
House of Lords Select Committee on Medical Ethics rejected possible
legalisation. Lord Joffe, whose patient (assisted dying) bill was the
subject of preliminary parliamentary debate in June, claimed that
public opinion had swung in favour of assisted suicide in the wake of
the Diane Pretty case last year. [BMJ, 22 November]
The US-based pro-abortion Catholics For a Free Choice have issued
a press release attempting to rehabilitate UNFPA after a damning US
government investigation last year. The US investigation last May found
that coercive abortion was being carried out in regions of China where
UNFPA operated and that UNFPA's "support of, and involvement in,
China's population-planning allows the government to implement more
effectively its program of coercive abortion." [
c-fam, 21 November,
CFFC, 19 November] Doug Silva of the Catholic Family and Human Rights
Institute, C-Fam, commented: "The desire of the international abortion
movement to whitewash the Chinese one child policy as well as the UN
agency complicity for over twenty years in the policy, shows just how
radical these people are. It is deliberately misleading to talk of
"progress" in China while the one child policy remains the enforced law
of the land." [SPUC source]
A Gallup poll has revealed that teenagers in the US are more pro-life
than their parents, LifeSite reports. 72% believe that abortion is
morally wrong and 32% believe that abortion should be illegal in all
circumstances, compared with only 17% of adults. [
LifeSite, 20 November]
The death toll from the 1974 Dublin bombings has been increased from 26
to 27 to recognise the death of an unborn child under Article 40 of the
Irish Constitution. Colette Doherty was in the late stages of pregnancy
when she and her unborn child were killed along with 25 other people. [
Breakingnews, 23 November]
Prosecutors in Zurich are investigating the Dignitas clinic in
Switzerland over the deaths of three foreigners, a Frenchman suffering
from Alzheimer's and a British couple who were not terminally ill.
Prosecutor Andreas Brunner said that it was unclear whether the man
suffering from Alzheimer's was capable of making an informed decision
to die. A doctor who works closely with Dignitas faces possible
prosecution over the double suicide of French twins suffering from
schizophrenia. [
The Observer, 23 November]
The Anglican archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, gave his 'full
backing' to the curate who is currently seeking legal action over the
late abortion of a baby with cleft palate. During a visit to the
Cambridge college where Joanna Jepson was studying, archbishop Williams
expressed his support for her actions. [
The Telegraph, 23 November]
A judge in Lagos has argued that the Nigerian National Assembly should
investigate allowing euthanasia for a patient who is suffering 'living
death' and is 'a liability to her family who were to give her comfort
and care.' Cardinal Olubunmi Okogie responded to the proposal, stating:
"Euthanasia is wrong in its totality, because the fact that a person is
about to die of natural causes does not justify a human decision to
attack human life." [
Bioedge, 21 November]
Pregnant women who eat large amounts of sugary or highly processed food
such as breakfast cereals, white rice and chocolate biscuits could be
increasing the risk of their babies developing neural tube defects such
as spina bifida, according to new research. The study was reported in
the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. [Daily Mail, 24 November]
A Human Life International activist has been arrested in London
for showing posters of aborted babies. No charges have yet been made
against Kevin O'Niel, whose arrest on Threadneedle Street was
photographed. Police have, however, threatened action if the
photographs are publicised. [HLI, 21 November]
Schools in Torbay, UK are delaying a scheme to distribute the
morning after pill because of 'adverse publicity.' The planned scheme
is part of a government teenage pregnancy strategy to halve the number
of teenage pregnancies, funded by a £85,000 grant. A spokesman for the
Primary Care Trust said: "Our position is that we do not want to
pressurise the schools. The final decision rest with each individual
school and we have to let them make whatever decision they feel is
right, in their own time." [
Herald Express, 21 November]
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