News, weekly update, 7 to 12 June
A
cross-party coalition of MPs is to push for changes to current abortion
legislation to mark the 40
th
anniversary of the passing of the
Abortion Act in Britain. Moves to increase access to
abortion include removing the need for two doctors to sign an abortion
referral
and the extension of the Abortion Act to Northern Ireland. Church
leaders and politicians in Northern Ireland have condemned proposals by
Westminster to impose abortion on Northern Ireland and are expected to
resist any
change in the law. Fr Tim Bartlett, the
secretary of the Catholic Bishops' Commission on Social Affairs in
Northern Ireland, said: "We are opposed to these
measures on two grounds. Firstly, there is the ethical opposition to
abortion
and our support for the right to life for the unborn child. Secondly,
that the
views of the democratically elected representatives of Northern Ireland
be taken into account." [
Observer,
10 June] Liam Gibson of SPUC Northern Ireland said:
"The vast majority of people in Northern Ireland and their elected representatives are opposed to any liberalisation
of their abortion laws. Despite this there is a very real threat that the
pro-abortion lobby in Britain could succeed in having the Abortion Act imposed upon the Province.
It is therefore vitally important that everyone, in Britain
as well as in Northern Ireland, should
write to their MPs and ask them to urge the government not to support any
attempt to extend the Abortion Act but instead respect the position of the
Northern Ireland Assembly on this issue. It would be an appalling tragedy if
the violence of the Troubles was replaced by the violence of abortion."
Cardinal Keith O'Brien, Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh, Scotland, has said that the Scottish parliament
should be able to make its own laws on issues such as abortion. The cardinal
said that the outcome of the recent election, in which the Labour party had
their worst result in Scotland in a generation, showed that there was "a
lot of disgruntled people". He said: "It was as if Scotland wasn't grown-up enough to deal with
something like Trident [nuclear submarines], adoption or abortion, and I think
voters were fed up of that." [
Scotsman, 12 June]
A British parliamentary committee has been meeting discuss a bill on the use of human tissue and embryos. The Joint Committee on the
Draft Human Tissue and Embryos Bill, which was recently published by the
Department of Health, will hold hearings and receive written evidence over the
coming weeks. The committee is expected to produce a report making recommendations to
the Government by the 25th of next month. [UK
Parliament, 12 June]
A woman in Britain has complained
after a Muslim pharmacist allegedly refused to sell her the morning-after pill and
she was required to wait 15 minutes for another pharmacist to come on duty. A
spokesman for Sainsbury's confirmed that pharmacists had the right to refuse to
sell morning-after pills for moral or religious reasons. [Evening
Post, Nottingham, 9 June]
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