News, weekly update, 18 to 24 July
The United Kingdom government says it has no plans to
change Northern Ireland's
restrictive abortion law and would expect the province's assembly to take over
legislation in this area. Mr Paul Goggins MP, a UK
minister responsible for Northern Ireland,
declared the policy in written answers to MPs' questions. [
News
Letter, 18 July] Mrs Betty Gibson, chairwoman of SPUC Northern Ireland,
said: "Until the power to decide abortion legislation rests with the
Assembly, pro-abortion MPs who do not represent anyone in Northern Ireland will be able to impose the Abortion
Act on the people here. The pro-abortion position dominates the House of
Commons. Any attempt to modify the Act is likely to result in many more
abortions. Some MPs have declared their intention to push for the extension of
the Act to Northern Ireland
when the Human Tissue and Embryos Bill is debated later this year. If the
violence of the Troubles is not to be replaced by the violence of abortion, it
is vital that members of the public write to Gordon Brown urging him not to
allow any liberalisation of the Abortion Act." [
SPUC, 19 July]
Women in Scotland
should be offered abortions quickly, under a series of state health service
draft guidelines. People with problems such as acute sexually-transmitted
infections and women wanting emergency contraception should be referred for
treatment within 48 hours, it is suggested. Most women seeking an abortion
should have the procedure before 10 weeks' gestation and under-24 year olds who
are sexually active should be tested for chlamydia, the recommendations say. A
spokesperson for the Catholic Church in Scotland
said: "These are the redundant ideas of an ideological mantra. No matter
how widely, easily or speedily available so-called sexual health services are
made, all the evidence suggests they have no impact." [
BBC Online, 17 July] John Smeaton, SPUC
national director, commented: "Government policy of improving access to
abortion puts women facing crisis pregnancies under even greater pressure to
abort and seeks to reduce abortion to a trivial procedure."
A British couple who have a family history of
breast cancer have reportedly won the right to screen their embryos for
a gene
that may trigger the disease. The Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority
(HFEA) gave them the licence, which is the first of its kind in
Britain. Gemma Wilkie, a spokeswoman for the HFEA, said: "I can confirm
that the
HFEA have granted a licence to University College Hospital in London to
use PGD to screen for the BRCA gene which causes a
susceptibility to inherited breast cancer. We have also received a
further
application for this condition which is still being considered." [
Times,
21 July] Alison Davis of No Less Human said: "This case clearly shows
yet again that, once killing is allowed for any reason, it is likely eventually
to be extended to allow more and more killing, all in the name of supposedly 'preventing
suffering.' The HFEA first allowed PGD 'only' for conditions it considered 'severe'
and which inevitably caused disability. Now it has allowed it for a condition
which has only 80% penetration. We can guess what will happen next, but the
wrongness is not in the effects of the slippery slope but in the fact that it
was allowed to start in the first place. The only ethical way to proceed is to
stop trying to deal with disabling conditions by killing those who have them,
and to welcome every child into the world."
It has been reported that the majority of
Portuguese doctors will refuse to perform abortions now that it has
been made more widely available in the country. The recently passed law
to allow abortion of all types of children until the
10
th week of pregnancy came into effect on 15 July. 80% of doctors
are expected to refuse to carry out abortions. Monsignor Carlos Alberto Moreira
di Azevedo, spokesman of the Portuguese Catholic bishops' conference, said:
"Catholic nurses and doctors have been encouraged to have recourse to their
right to objection of conscience and many have done so. This comes as a
surprise to the government. Many hospitals will not be able to perform
abortions because so many doctors are having recourse to their right to
objection of conscience." [
Fides/CWN on EWTN, 18
July] Abortion was previously permitted for disability.
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, 2013