News Roundup

US state bans discriminatory Down Syndrome abortions

The US state of West Virginia has banned abortion of foetuses if they have Down Syndrome or other disabilities.

The “Unborn Child with Down Syndrome Protection and Education Act” prohibit patients from terminating a pregnancy based on the possibility that the foetus may develop a disability. The law goes into effect on June 10 of this year.

Abortion providers will have to ask each patient if they are choosing to terminate a pregnancy based on a potential disability. Providers will then have to submit a statement to the state confirming that is not the reason. Medical practitioners which do not comply with this law could lose their licences. Patients would face no penalties.

West Virginians for Life said that the law would protect the lives of those with Down Syndrome.

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US state ends its residency rule for medically assisted suicide

The US state of Oregon will no longer limit medically assisted suicide to the state’s residents after a lawsuit successfully challenged the restriction as unconstitutional.

In a settlement on Monday, the Oregon Health Authority agreed to stop enforcing the residency requirement and to ask the Legislature to remove it from the law.

Laura Echevarria, a spokeswoman for National Right to Life, which opposes such laws, warned that, without a residency requirement, Oregon risked becoming the nation’s “assisted-suicide tourism capital.”

Enacted in 1997, Oregon’s first-in-the-nation law allows terminally ill people deemed to have less than six months to live to end their lives by voluntarily taking lethal medications prescribed by a physician for that purpose.

Since the law took effect, 2,159 people have used it to end their lives, according to data published last month by the Oregon Health Authority.

National Right to Life is concerned that people might be able to travel to Oregon without having much of a relationship with a doctor in the state, thus chipping away at protections limiting the use of the law, Echevarria said.

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Priests offer accommodation for Ukrainian refugees

Several priests in the Diocese of Armagh have pledged to offer accommodation in their parishes to house Ukrainian refugees.

Fr Paul Byrne is one of a growing number of priests in the diocese who have registered with the Irish Red Cross to offer his spare room in the Parochial House in Termonfeckin, Co Louth.

The diocese has some 120 priests across 61 parishes who have been asked by Archbishop Eamon Martin to consider offering any spare rooms or accommodation for use by refugees.

Fr Paul is a member of the Diocesan Council of Priests who met last Thursday to discuss the situation and hear reports from the National Bishop’s Council which confirmed that all bishops had offered to take the lead on offering their homes to help refugees.

“We have to take a lead in this to encourage others to free up any empty properties or holiday homes for short term use by the Red Cross for refugees,” he said.

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Pastor arrested in Ukraine as hunt for clerics on Russian ‘blacklist’ continues

A Ukrainian American pastor is reported to have been abducted in the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol.

About 10 Russian soldiers are said to have arrived at the home of 50 year old Dmitry Bodyu, bishop of the Word of Life Church in Melitopol city last Saturday and taken him away. NBC News says the troops also confiscated his American passport along with the family’s phones and other devices.

Pastor Bodyu left Crimea to live in Ukraine in 2014 after the Russian annexation because of his American citizenship.

His arrest comes amid fears pastors are being targeted by Russian troops in Ukraine. Last week Release International warned that a hunt for pastors in Ukraine had begun in areas of the country now under Russian control. The charity has issued an urgent call to prayer.

Last week Russian soldiers arrested the pastor of the Light of the World Evangelical Church of Mariupol.

Alexander Glushko was arrested at his house in the besieged city. He is believed to have been taken to territory previously occupied by Russian troops and imprisoned close to Donetsk.

Another pastor of a church near Mariupol reports that he was blacklisted for arrest but managed to escape. Release International’s partner in Ukraine, ‘Pavel’ describes that escape as ‘a miracle’.

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UK government will ‘intervene directly’ to ensure abortion in North

The UK government will “intervene directly” to ensure abortion is made widely available in Northern Ireland following the Assembly elections in May.

In a written ministerial statement on Thursday the Northern Secretary, Brandon Lewis, said regulations were being prepared which would give London the necessary powers to directly commission an abortion regime if Belfast continues to fail to do so.

These include placing a duty on the North’s Department of Health to make abortion available “as soon as reasonably practicable” and removing the need for cross-community approval from Northern ministers, which has blocked their establishment.

Mr Lewis said on Thursday it was “unacceptable that access to basic abortion healthcare is not available [in Northern Ireland] as it is across the rest of the UK” and he had a legal obligation to intervene.

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Teachers lack training to deliver classes in RSE, says report

Almost two in three (61pc) student-teachers said they were not receiving enough input on RSE as part of their own education..

This is despite the fact that nearly all of the students (94pc) intended to teach RSE when they started working.

The same study, carried out at Dublin City University (DCU), also found no explicit reference to RSE in a sample of documents used in teacher training programmes.

Researchers from the School of Human Development in DCU Institute of Education explored the provision of sexuality education to student teachers.

While they say teachers play an integral role in RSE, lecturers reported minimal time allocation for RSE on teacher training programmes and it is typically a one-off input.

The report calls for a strengthening of the preparation for RSE in teacher training as well as continuing professional development to ensure all children and young people receive school-based comprehensive, inclusive, rights-based education in the subject.

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Arizona Legislature Passes 15-Week Abortion Ban

Arizona lawmakers passed a bill banning most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, becoming the second state legislature to push through this restriction ahead of a pivotal Supreme Court decision that could alter the abortion rights landscape nationwide.

The Arizona House of Representatives passed the bill in a 31-26 vote Thursday. It now heads to the desk of Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican who has signed restrictions on abortion since becoming governor in 2015.

The legislative efforts in Arizona follow similar moves in Florida, where Republican lawmakers earlier this month approved a ban on most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

These bills are similar to the Mississippi law at the centre of a Supreme Court case that challenges the high court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, which established a constitutional right to abortion. Similar bills in West Virginia and Kentucky passed one chamber in those state legislatures.

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Abortion exclusion zones passed by NI Assembly

A draconian new law making a pro-life presence outside abortion facilities illegal was passed in the Northern Assembly yesterday evening by 55 votes to 29.

The Abortion Services (Safe Access Zones) law was strongly backed by Sinn Féin and the SDLP. The DUP and TUV voted against the new law. The main sponsor of the legislation, Green Party MLA, Clare Bailey, previously volunteered for pro-abortion group Marie Stopes.

MLAs voted in favour of the bill despite the Assembly receiving 6,412 submissions from members of the public opposing it, and a mere 14 submissions in favour.

Before the law passed, Alina Dulgheriu from the pro-life group ‘Be Here For Me’ appealed to MLAs in Stormont to pull back from endorsing the radical measure.

Recalling how she herself almost went though with an abortion but for a chance encounter with a pro-life person outside the clinic, Alina said: “I saw on the abortion provider’s [Marie Stopes] website that the clinic offered pre-abortion counselling. I called and asked for some help. ‘We only offer abortion’, came the glib reply. The day that I turned up to my abortion appointment, a volunteer outside the clinic gave me a leaflet. It offered the help that I had been searching for.  I couldn’t be prouder of the life my daughter and I have charted out together. The reality is that so many women like me have had to make an abortion appointment not through choice, but by pressure. A BBC poll last week showed that more than one in ten women have felt “coerced” into having an abortion. This could be at the hands of an unsupportive partner like mine; or parents, or friends telling women that there’s no way that they could ever handle motherhood”.

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Pope Francis and Bishops around the world consecrate Russia, Ukraine to Mary

Pope Francis presided today over special prayers for Russia and Ukraine, echoing a request first made during the apparitions of Our Lady in Fatima in 1917.

Back then, the three visionaries reported that Our Lady specifically requested that Russia be consecrated to her Immaculate Heart. They recounted that she said: “If my requests are heeded, Russia will be converted, and there will be peace. If not, she will spread her errors throughout the world, causing wars and persecutions of the Church. The good will be martyred, the Holy Father will have much to suffer, various nations will be annihilated”.

The Pontiff was joined by bishops, priests and ordinary faithful around the world in the consecration prayer Friday afternoon. And to hammer home its universal nature, the Vatican translated the text of the prayer into three dozen languages. Retired Pope Benedict XVI also participated and an envoy of Francis celebrated a simultaneous Mass at the Fatima shrine itself.

The Mass is Francis’s latest effort to rally prayers for an end to the war while keeping open options for dialogue with the Russian Orthodox Church and its influential leader, Patriarch Kirill. Francis has yet to publicly condemn Russia by name for its invasion, though his denunciations have grown increasingly strident and outraged in recent weeks.

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Careful wording needed for referendum on mothers in the home, Minister says

There is a “genuine risk” that a referendum on removing a reference to the work of mothers in the home from the Constitution could be lost if it is not carefully worded, Minister for Children and Equality Roderic O’Gorman has said.

At the Oireachtas Committee on Gender Equality yesterday, Mr O’Gorman came under pressure from members to publish his department’s proposed wording for such a referendum question, with progress on the matter described as “glacial”.

The Minister said he was “unclear” as to how his department and the committee might engage on wording. He said at this stage any referendum “is potential” and that no date had been set, though he wanted one to be held next year.

“There is fairly broad acceptance and agreement we need to change the Constitution but what we are going to do is not agreed,” he said.

The newly-established committee is considering how to implement the 45 recommendations delivered by the Citizens’ Assembly on gender equality last April, the centre piece of which was that Article 41.2 of the Constitution should be deleted and replaced.

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