News, 12 December 2007
The British government could let pharmacists supply birth control pills without a prescription. [
PA on Channel 4, 12 December] John Smeaton,
SPUC national director, said: "This is all part and parcel
of the government's massive attack on human life and of their total disregard
for the health care of women, particularly young women. Producers of the contraceptive pill are
quite clear that one of the ways in which the pill works is by preventing the
implantation of the newly-conceived human embryo in the lining of the womb. You can be sure of one thing. The
government will not be warning women about the danger of micro-abortions in
their statements and publicity about this service." [
SPUC, 12 December]
SPUC has described aspects of the
government's new schools strategy as "another ratcheting-up of the
targeting of young people to be victims of the culture of death." Paul Tully,
SPUC general secretary, said: "The
Children's
Plan promises a review of best practice in sex education. Every review
since 1990 has led to calls for 'more of the same' policy - sex education and wider
provision of sex facilities (abortion, contraception, sex advice) to children and
teenagers. The government's reviewers and advisors are not only committed
to the promotion of explicit sex information and abortion services. Many of them
are actually providers of such services - funded by the government - like Brook,
and the abortion service BPAS." SPUC also accused Mr Ed Balls, the minister responsible, of presenting misleading
data on teenage pregnancy, which has actually increased in recent years. [
SPUC, 12 December] Mr Ed Balls
MP, secretary of state for children, schools and families,
published his
department's
Children's
Plan yesterday.
The House of Lords
has considered a proposal to require that birth certificates should record
whether a child was conceived using donated gametes. An amendment to the Human Fertilisation
and Embryology bill tabled in the House of Lords on Monday would compel parents
to inform the registrar of donor conceptions. Baroness Barker, who was involved
in drawing up the amendment, said it was intended "to find ways to minimise the
potential hurt or distress either to the people or their parents", but support
groups for couples using IVF and gamete donation condemned the move as an attack
on parental privacy. [
Evening Standard, 11 December]
Argentina's
president-elect has stopped legislation that would liberalise the country's
abortion law. This move comes as a surprise, since Mrs Cristina Fernández de
Kirchner made ambiguous statements about abortion prior to her election, and
belongs to the pro-abortion Peronist party. At present, all abortions are
illegal in Argentina,
but there are cases, including rape or the impregnation of a mentally retarded
woman, in which such abortions do not carry a criminal penalty. [
LifeSite, 7 December]
The Scottish minister for health has said that
it might one day be possible to move to a system of presumed consent for organ
donation, but there is little public support for it at the moment. Ms Nicola
Sturgeon MSP made the comment in response to calls from doctors' leaders in Scotland
for such a change in the law in order to increase the number of transplants. [
BBC, 9 December]
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