News, weekly update, 20 to 26 June
The House of Commons science and technology
committee is holding an inquiry into the current UK law on
abortion. The cross-party committee is looking at issues such as the upper time
limit for abortion, whether to abolish the need for two doctors to sign
abortion referral forms, the possibility of defining 'severe disability' in
case of abortion on grounds of disability, and the feasibility of allowing
nurses and midwives to perform first trimester abortions. The committee has asked
for written evidence to be submitted by 2 September and will hold oral evidence
sessions in the autumn. [
Telegraph,
21 June, and
Select
Committee on Science and Technology, 20 June] Paul Tully, general secretary
of SPUC, said: "The Science and Technology Committee has been angling for
a long time to get the Abortion Act 'opened up' on the floor of the house. They
know that this will lead to radical pro-abortion amendments, which will be
tacitly welcomed by a Blair/Brown government. This is now a very grave danger
if any abortion amendments are attached to the forthcoming Human Tissue and
Embryos bill."
It was recently reported that Mr Tony Blair was to
convert to Catholicism. Paul Tully, SPUC general secretary, commented:
"I'm sure that many Catholics, including SPUC members, keenly hope and
pray for Mr Blair's repentance and conversion to the Catholic Church's view
that human life is to be protected by law from the time of conception. Mr Blair
voted three times to permit abortion up to birth before he became prime minister.
As PM he has promoted the practice of secret abortions for schoolgirls without
their parents being informed; he has encouraged use of the morning-after pill,
which the manufacturers say may cause early abortions. He has championed
destructive research on human embryos in the laboratory. Last year his
government launched an appeal for a global fund to promote abortion for the
poorest people around the world. SPUC as an organisation has no religious or
political affiliation. For many years we have called on the prime minister to
repudiate his anti-life position, and we continue to do so. We would be very
concerned at the impact on Muslims and their commitment to the pro-life cause
if Mr Blair became a Muslim. We have similar concern for the impact on Christians
if Mr Blair joins the Catholic church without publicly repudiating his publicly
professed pro-abortion and pro-IVF positions."
[SPUC,
22 June]
A British health
minister, Caroline Flint, has welcomed the increase in early abortions and the
use of the morning-after pill. She said "We welcome the fact that a higher
percentage of abortions are taking place at an early stage ... we have invested
£8 million to improve early access [to abortion]..." She admitted the government needed
to do more to reduce the number of so-called unwanted pregnancies and called
for an improvement in access to contraception. [
Times
19 June] It has been suggested that the increase in abortions has been fuelled by immigration from eastern European countries. This
immigration has led to a significant rise in the UK
birth-rate in recent years and, according to Ann Furedi, chief executive of Britain's
largest abortion-provider, it "would be surprising if East European immigration
wasn't having an impact on abortion as well". Dr Kate Guthrie of the Royal
College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, disagrees, pointing out that the
biggest increase in abortions was among the under-20s, whereas most women from Eastern Europe were in their 20s.
[
Guardian,
22 June]
Ireland's Life Pregnancy Care Service will not have its funding withdrawn
despite standing firm on its policy not to provide information about foreign
abortion facilities. The Crisis Pregnancy Agency, who provide Life with annual
funding of around €300,000, insists on organisations it funds providing clients
with information about how to obtain an abortion abroad, but has reached a
settlement with Life that will allow it to continue with its ethical stance on
abortion. [
Irish
Examiner, 26 June] Patrick Buckley of European Life Network, Dublin, said:
"This is the second time the CPA has attempted to force a pro-life agency
to refer women on to other agencies which will provide information on abortion
services. The CPA was set up to reduce the number of crisis pregnancies and
thereby the numbers of women seeking abortions abroad. Its policies however
seem to continually run counter to their brief and the Irish constitution by
insisting that all counselling agencies provide information on abortion
services abroad."
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