News, 9 October 2003
A conference in Bangkok on 'reproductive health rights' has asserted
that some Thai women are being coerced into having abortions, the
Bangkok Post reports. According to the Asia Pacific Network of People
Living with HIV/Aids, 14% of women who test HIV positive are coerced
into abortion or sterilisation and 31% are advised not to have
children. [
The Bangkok Post, 8 October]
A study carried out at the Johns Hopkins University claims that
handheld abortion devices known as Manual Vacuum Aspirators are safe to
use into the second trimester and could be mass produced for use in the
developing world. Scott Weinberg of the Population Research Institute,
stated: "Manual Vacuum Aspiration is so substandard a procedure that it
should not be used anywhere." He added that PRI has "evidence showing
that UK-funded Marie Stopes performs MVA abortions under the guise of
post-abortion care in Kenya where abortion is illegal. Thousands of
these hurtful devices have been callously delivered to Third World
countries by UNFPA. They should be ashamed." [
CWNews, 8 October]
The outgoing governor of California, Gray Davis, signed a bill
last week allowing pharmacists to dispense the morning after pill. He
also signed a bill into law authorising 'comprehensive' sex education
for children, including those of pre-primary age. [
LifeSite, 8 October]
The Supreme Court has refused to hear the appeal of a drug addict
convicted after the death of her unborn child through the use of crack
cocaine during pregnancy. Regina McKnight tested positive for cocaine
and the stillborn child was found to have drugs in her system. McKnight
is now serving between 12 and 20 years in South Carolina, though her
lawyers claim that it cannot be proven that cocaine was the cause of
the baby's death. 15 US states have laws protecting the unborn whilst
13 offer partial protection, according to National Right to Life. [
Yahoo News, 6 October]
Ireland could become the first country in the world to seek the
extradition of a person for assisted suicide, Total Catholic reports.
The Republic's Director of Public Prosecutions has moved to extradite a
US Unitarian minister who helped a woman commit suicide in Dublin last
year. The Rev George Exoo of West Virginia aided the suicide of
Rosemary Toole Gilhooley, who suffered from depression, and could face
a 14 year prison sentence. [
Total Catholic]
Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania have announced a
breakthrough in mammalian cloning through the combining of cloned mouse
embryos. The technique improved the cell count and increased the cloned
embryo survival rate from 1% to 8%. In a press release reporting on the
advance, Josephine Quintavalle of Comment on Reproductive Ethics
responded: "We have reached a stage in scientific research and
investment where the embryo is considered the most tempting target of
all time." [CORE press release, 7 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