Public meetings are being held in Ireland on end-of-life issues. The Irish Hospice Foundation is seeking the views of citizens on advance directives, assisted food and fluids, organ donation and transplantation. A meeting is due to be held at the Royal Irish Academy in Dublin this evening. [Irish Times, 25 June]
The Church of England has said that post-conception family planning agencies should be allowed to advertise in the broadcast media, provided they declare whether or not they refer for abortions. In a response to the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) the church's Mission and Public Affairs Council and the Communications Office of the Archbishops' Council criticised the ASA's proposal for more extensive advertising of condoms. [Ekklesia, 25 June] SPUC's submission opposes broadcasting advertising by abortion agencies and of contraception. [SPUC]
A female minister of the Episcopal church in America has claimed that God "rejoices" over abortions. In a letter to a church website, the Nina Churchman said that abortion "is not considered a sin" by the Episcopal church. [LifeSiteNews.com, 24 June] In April it was reported that another female Episcopalian minister, Kathleen Hancock Ragsdale, had described abortion as "a blessing". [LifeSiteNews.com, 2 April]
An international pro-life leader has recounted acts of intimidation and violence against him and other pro-lifers by supporters of abortion. In a interview with a Catholic website, Fr Tom Euteneuer, head of Human Life International, recounted a poisoning attempt, threats of death and physical harm, assaults, verbal abuse, and acts of sacrilege and blasphemy. He described anti-lifers as cowards and said that he prayed for personal protection. [Moms for Life, 19 June]
A court in the American state of Virginia has upheld the state's ban on partial birth abortion. The upheld law mirrors the US federal ban on the procedure. A spokesman for Americans United for Life said that partial birth abortion should more correctly be termed partial birth infanticide. [Americans United for Life, 25 June]
A woman has died of a blood clot after taking hormonal birth control, an inquest has heard. Helen Schofield died three months after switching from one type of contraceptive pill to another, Dianette. A spokesman for Bayer, the pill's manufacturer, said the risk of a blood clot was "slightly increased" for any form of contraceptive pill. [Daily Mail, 25 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