News, 31 May 2006
The bpas (formerly
the British Pregnancy Advisory Service) has said that the abortion pill RU-486,
mifepristone, accounted for nearly a third of the 32,000 abortions it provided
in 2005 to women in the first nine weeks of pregnancy, making bpas the single
biggest provider of the abortion pill in Europe.
Ms Ann Furedi, chief executive of bpas said that demand for the pill has "taken
off" since they started allowing women to complete the abortion process at
home. She said that "what makes it attractive to women" is that "it is the
woman having the abortion rather than a doctor doing it to them." Michaela
Aston, spokeswoman for the Life organisation, said: "RU-486 is a powerful and
dangerous cocktail of drugs." She noted that it had been responsible for the
deaths of at least 10 women worldwide. [
The Times 29
May]
Figures from the Office for National
Statistics show that, between 1996 and 2004, more than 20 women had abortions
at later than 20 weeks of pregnancy because their babies had been diagnosed as
having club feet. Another four babies were aborted in the nine year period because
they had extra digits or webbed feet. The charity Antenatal Results and Choices
defended the abortions. The director of ARC, Ms Jane Fisher, said: "This is not
part of a move towards designer babies. These are difficult and painful
issues." Sue Banton of Steps, a support charity for parents of children with
foot disabilities, expressed disquiet. [
The Times
29 May]
Pope Benedict spoke at the former Nazi
concentration camp at Auschwitz during his visit to Poland. He spoke of "the cynicism
of that regime which treated men and women as material objects, and failed to
see them as persons embodying the image of God... They were seen as part of the
refuse of world history, in an ideology which valued only the empirically
useful; everything else, according to this view, was to be written off as 'lebensunwertes
Leben' - 'life unworthy of being lived'." [
Zenit 28 May]
Katie Grant writing in the Scottish Sunday Times
has called for scrapping the Scottish Executive approach to reducing teenage
pregnancy and abortion by promoting sex education and contraceptives. She
points to the negative effects of the sexual health policies in Scotland,
including increasing abortion rates among under-20s and the emotional scars
abortion can leave. Rates of underage pregnancy are particularly high in the
Lothians, which was part of a pilot scheme to prevent under-age pregnancies. [
Sunday Times
28 May]
A report titled "Raising Expectations" by
the UK
government's Basic Skills Agency, highlights the fact that pregnancy can be the
ultimate wake-up call, according to Ms Carol Taylor, executive director for
national development at the agency. She noted that many girls who became
pregnant initially had low expectations but quickly became highly aspirational,
with the help of classes on parenting and basic skills. Ms Nona Dawson, a
research fellow at Bristol University and an expert
on teenage pregnancy, has found that young mothers develop a new found "belief"
in education for their own and their child's sake. Charlotte Savage who joined
one of the Basic Skills projects now describes getting pregnant at 16 as the
"best thing that ever happened to me." [
The
Observer 28 May]
The public are being asked to choose a
series of picture warnings to appear on cigarette packets. They can give their
opinion on a website set up by the UK Department of Health. One of the pictures
which may be used is that of an unborn baby with the words "Smoking when
pregnant harms your baby." [
BBC 26 May]
A white couple have told how a mistake at an
IVF clinic run by the Leeds NHS Trust, which led them to have mixed race twins,
"threatened our marriage and our whole existence." An Asian man's sperm was
wrongly used to impregnate the woman's eggs at a fertility clinic run by Leeds
National Health Service Trust. [
The Guardian
30 May]
Two Chinese activists, including Mao
Hengfeng, who has fought China's
one-child policy for many years, have been taken away by Shanghai police. Ms Mao was detained on 23
May, ahead of the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square
massacre on 4 June. The Guardian notes that Ms Mao reportedly served almost two
years in a labour camp for her 15-year campaign to abolish China's one-child policy. Since her
second pregnancy in the late 1980s she has been detained in psychiatric wards,
coerced into having an abortion and removed from her job. [
The
Guardian 27 May]
Shaukat Aziz, the Pakistani prime minister,
has urged religious scholars to educate people about the importance of small
families, to "ensure socio-economic development." He said "We may fail to
deliver our promises of improving quality of life of the people without
achieving our objective to control rapid growing population." [
Islamic
Republic News Agency 30 May] Dr Majid Katme of SPUC's Muslim Division said:
"Islam encourages all Muslims in the world to produce many children, according
to prophetic statements. Big extended families are the norm in Islam. In the
Holy Book Al Qur'an, God Almighty has guaranteed the sustenance of every new
child born.... He also warned us not to 'kill our children for fear of poverty'."
The Ecuadorian constitutional court has
unanimously concurred with a lower court ruling prohibiting the sale of the
Postinor 2 morning after pill. The suit to have the pill banned was put forward
by Fernando Rosero Rohde, president of a local pro-life group in November 2004.
He said the ruling was "an historic day for Ecuador."
[
Life Site News 29 May]
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