News, 31 October 2003
SPUC has described last year's abortion statistics as 'a tragedy'. In a
press release, Paul Tully, general secretary of SPUC stated: "The 2002
abortion figures for England and Wales show no significant shift in the
number of recorded abortions or in the rate of abortions per 1,000
women in their main child-bearing years... Furthermore, the government's
strategy of reducing recorded abortion by promoting the morning-after
pill is not working. On the contrary, unrecorded early abortions caused
by the morning-after pill would undoubtedly add many thousands to these
figures." [
SPUC, 31 October]
The availability of abortion-inducing drugs has contributed to a
massive increase in abortion in the Indian state of Kerala, LifeSite
reports. The 165% rise in abortions in two years was reported in a
survey conducted by women's magazine Vanitha. According to the state
health department, abortions in government hospitals rose from 16,339
in 1999 to 43,368 in 2001-02. [
LifeSite, 30 October]
A US Senator is drafting legislation "to make clear that our government
must make human rights front and centre in any discussions with the
North Korean regime" after the publication of a damning report on human
rights abuses carried out by the regime. The report, released last week
by the US Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, documented a large
number of human rights violations taking place in prison camps,
including the use of torture, forced abortion and infanticide. Senator
Brownback, who said that he had been inundated with petitions on the
subject said: "We will no longer subsidise the North Korean regime to
allow it to continue building gulags and committing gross human rights
violations." [
Lifenews.com, 30 October]
Germany's justice minister has drawn criticism from politicians and
church leaders after she suggested changing the point at which an
embryo outside the womb can be classed as having 'human dignity.' In a
speech in Berlin, Brigitte Zypries also mooted the possibility of
relaxing the laws governing human cloning. The German Catholic bishops'
conference asked for 'a recognition of human dignity at any stage of
human life' whilst the head of the parliamentary bio-ethics commission
stated his opposition to any change in the current law. [
Yahoo News, 30 October]
Researchers in Seattle have found that women with Cystic Fibrosis do
not carry an increased risk of death during pregnancy, Reuters reports.
"Patients with CF are currently living to their fourth decade and are
making reproductive decisions," said Dr Christopher H. Goss of the
University of Washington Medical Center. [
Reuters, 30 October]
Irish MEP Dana Rosemary Scallon has welcomed the meeting between the
Catholic bishops and the Irish Prime Minister in a letter published in
Irish Examiner. She also draws attention to the government's failure to
join Germany, Italy, Austria and Portugal in opposing EU proposals to
fund embryo research. [
Irish Examiner, 31 October]
A pilot scheme by North Tyneside Primary Care Trust will allow teenage
girls to text sexual health services 24 hours a day if they feel
uncomfortable visiting a doctor or telephoning from the family home.
After making contact, the girl will then be invited for a quick
appointment to receive advice on the morning after pill and
contraception. [
BBC, 30 October]
Muslim doctors and medical students in Britain are being discriminated
against because of their pro-life views, a leading Muslim doctor
asserted at a London conference last week. Addressing a conference
organised by the Muslim division of SPUC, Dr Jafer Qureshi stated that
several cases of discrimination are being investigated by lawyers and
may go to the Commission for Racial Equality. [
SPUC, 27 October]
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