News, 6 November 2003
President Bush has signed the new law banning partial birth abortion.
It is the first major change in American abortion law since 1973,
coming at a time when the abortion rate in the US is falling. President
Bush stated: "For years, a terrible form of violence has been directed
against children who are inches from birth, while the law looked the
other way. Today at last, the American people and our government have
confronted the violence, and come to the defence of the innocent
child." Abortion advocates have vowed to fight the law in the courts. [
RTE News,
BBC, 6 November]
The EU Industry Committee has voted in favour of destructive embryo
research by supporting an amendment adopted in a plenary session of the
parliament in 2001. The EU may now fund research on early human embryos
if it is permitted in the member states. [
Euro-fam, 4 November]
A Texan construction company has pulled out of a project to build an
abortion clinic after the Austin Area Pro-Life Concrete Contractors and
Suppliers Association announced a boycott. Every concrete supplier
within a 60-mile radius agreed not to supply the project after they
received huge numbers of telephone calls from around the country asking
them not to involve themselves. [
Newsday.com, 5 November]
The morning after pill is to be made available over the counter in
Australia from January 2004, following approval by a government
committee to change the drug's status. [
LifeSite, 5 November]
In an interview on a Catholic website, US pro-life lawmaker Rep. Mark
Kennedy discusses the pro-life study group he helped to start on
Capitol Hill and life as one of the fundamental principles at the basis
of society. [
Catholic Spirit, 6 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