News, 6 June 2007
The British
Medical Association (BMA) has said that women should be able to get abortion on
demand and that it should be carried out by midwives and nurses. The BMA's
ethics committee published a briefing paper supporting changes to the Abortion
Act to speed up treatment for women who are less than three months pregnant.
Under the proposals, a woman seeking an abortion could refer herself to an
abortionist without going through a doctor. Tim Street, the Scottish director for the Family
Planning Association, welcomed the proposals. He said: "We would welcome
anything that makes it easier for women to get through the process once they
have made a decision." Peter Kearney, spokesman for the Catholic Church in Scotland, said: "The changes they are proposing
would probably make little difference in reality since we do have de facto
abortion on demand in this country. The medical profession have failed quite
abysmally to uphold the current legislation. Our view remains very clear on
this, and that is that abortion is morally wrong and is not the answer to
unwanted pregnancies." [
The Scotsman, 6 June] Anthony Ozimic, SPUC political secretary, commented: "It is
understandable that doctors are sick of abortion. It grates on their
consciences and demeans them. Killing unborn babies is not what doctors become
doctors for. But the BMA's call for others to take on this role is deplorable
because it amounts to doctors dumping work on nurses - the gruesome work of
killing unborn children. Nurses are already over-stretched and in short supply,
and nursing is about caring, not killing. This would be a damaging blow to
nursing." [
SPUC, 6 June]
A bill to make
counselling compulsory for women seeking abortion has been rejected by 75 votes
by British MPs. The proposals, which were sponsored by Conservative Ann
Winterton, also included a mandatory "cooling off" period of a week and would
have ensured that women were warned about the possible physical and mental
ill-effects of abortion. The bill was defeated by 182 votes to 107. Mrs
Winterton said: "I am saddened that the House of Commons apparently does not
put women's health at the top of its agenda. Young people need time to think
about things to make the right decision for them. [A woman] should be armed
with the facts about the possible dis-benefits for her in later life. It's not
patronising, it's actually being kind to the young woman." Opponents of the
bill described it as "an attack on women's [re]productive rights." [
Guardian, 5 June] Anthony
Ozimic of SPUC commented: "We will be analysing the voting
list very carefully, as it provides useful evidence for assessing the relative
strengths of the pro-life and pro-abortion lobbies in Parliament. We remain
concerned about any amendments on abortion that may be inserted into the government's
draft Human Tissue and Embryos Bill. Given the continuing predominance of the
pro-abortion lobby in Parliament, any abortion amendments passed by Parliament
are likely to make the situation on abortion worse." Before the vote, two
doctors told MPs that abortion could be a serious risk to women's mental
health. Dr Trevor Stammers, a tutor in general practice at St George's University of London, said: "The most recent
research has shown very clearly that abortion presents a serious risk to the
long-term mental health of women and why it is therefore important to know
which women are being offered abortion on mental health grounds." Dr Robert
Balfour, a consultant gynaecologist, cited a Finnish study of 5,000 women
between 1987 and 2000, which found that women who had an abortion were six
times more likely to commit suicide than those who had given birth in the past
year. He said: "We are now at
a crossroads. In recognition of this mounting and overwhelming evidence it is
essential that women are made aware of these risks. It is important that they
receive adequate, informed counselling." [
Channel
4, 4 June]
Cardinal George
Pell has urged Catholic politicians in Australia to oppose a bill that would allow
therapeutic cloning in New South Wales. The proposed law would permit the cloning
of human embryos to be harvested for stem-cell research. The cardinal said: "It
is a serious moral matter. Catholic politicians who vote for this legislation
must realize that their voting has consequences for their place in the life of
the Church." [
CWNews on EWTN, 5 June]
The Syrian delegation to the United Nations'
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)
has agreed that Syria will drop opposition to abortion. The legal adviser
with the Syrian Commission for Family Affairs, Mona Asa'ad, said that the
government also planned to promote contraception in order to combat "unwanted
pregnancies". Ferdous Ara Begum, the Joint Secretary of the Ministry of Women
and Children Affairs for the People's Republic of Bangladesh, said that Syria must implement "legal support" for women to
"terminate unwanted pregnancies without penalty." [
LifeSite, 5 June]
British scientists experimenting on human embryonic cells have
developed a new technique that they hope may cure blindness. The surgery aims
to combat age-related macular degeneration, which affects around 300,000 people
in the UK. Researchers think that the first operation, which
would transplant embryonic stem cells into the eye, could take place within five
years. [Daily Mail, 6 June]
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