News, weekly summary 13 November 2009
Abortion
- The government has announced that the
teaching of sex education will be compulsory from age five onwards in
state schools in England [Department for Children, Schools and Families, 5 November] http://is.gd/4UdTl Paul Tully, SPUC general secretary, commented: "We condemn this
exploitation of the state-controlled school system by the government to
deliver its anti-life policies to children, by-passing parental
involvement." [SPUC, 5 November] http://is.gd/4NPXj
The government has signaled that such education will include teaching
children about abortion, contraception and homosexuality [SPUC, 11 November] SPUC has called for the
government to scrap its plans for
compulsory sex education, in the light of
the rise in teenage abortions. New
Department of Health figures reveal a steep rise in the number of abortions
among 14 and 15 year olds in the last two years.
[Daily
Mail, 2 November] http://is.gd/4M0Q0 John Smeaton, SPUC director, commented: "The rise in
teenage abortions is a direct result of the government's obsession with
providing abortion to schoolgirls without parental knowledge or consent. It's
vital that parents take a stand against government authorities whose policies
lead to usurping parents' rightful role." [SPUC, 2 November] http://is.gd/4L0Oq
- Official
figures suggest that there has been a slight increase in abortion in
Northern Ireland. 92 women had abortions in 2008, whereas 79 women had
abortions in 2007. [BBC, 10 November] http://is.gd/4Ueqd Liam Gibson of SPUC Northern Ireland commented: "Even a slight increase in the number of abortions is a matter of grave
concern since every abortion means the death of a child." [SPUC, 10 November] http://is.gd/4RUIg
- British Victims of Abortion (BVA)
has
welcomed a new study which confirms that abortion is bad for women. The
study, by Professor David Fergusson and his team at the department of
psychological medicine, university of Otago, New Zealand, found
abortion can put women at increased risk of mental health problems. [Telegraph, 2 November] http://is.gd/4M13P
Margaret Cuthill of BVA commented: "What we at British Victims of
Abortion hear in the counselling room confirms the truth of Professor
Fergusson's results." [SPUC, 2 November] http://is.gd/4L5NR
Euthanasia and assisted suicide; disability
- SPUC
Pro-Life has called for an apparent double suicide case to be
investigated. The BBC reported the deaths of Dennis and Flora Milner of
Newbury, Berkshire and their alleged suicide note. [BBC, 3 November] http://is.gd/4MbRU Paul Tully, SPUC Pro-Life's general secretary, commented: "The police
should investigate the circumstances of this couple's apparent suicide
to establish whether any other person was involved in the deaths. [SPUC Pro-Life, 3 November] http://is.gd/4Mcr7
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