Sarah Ewert contacted the BBC after travelling to England to have an abortion
Abortion is not a compassionate response to cases of fatal disability in unborn children, says SPUC in Northern Ireland.
SPUC Northern Ireland was responding to the case of Sarah Ewert, a woman who contacted the BBC to say that the law on abortion in Northern Ireland had forced her to travel to England to abort a child diagnosed with anencephaly.
Liam Gibson, SPUC Northern Ireland's development officer, commented: "Abortion is not a compassionate response to the diagnosis of fatal disability. Babies with fatal disabilities are no less human than other children and share the same right to life as all other human beings. [SPUC, 9 October]
Other stories:
- An anencephalic baby is not a 'dead body' [Belfast Telegraph, 14 October]
- 20 reasons to think twice about aborting a baby with anencephaly [Peter Saunders, 13 October]
- Mother of triplets decides to not to abort after pro-life march [March for the Babies, 15 October]
- Letting women stockpile morning-after pills won't cut abortions or unplanned pregnancies, says US academic [Mail, 15 October]
- Ecuador defies UN, Planned Parenthood, and internationalist pressure to liberalize abortion laws [LifeSiteNews.com, 14 October]
- Irish priest removes pro-abortion politician from Communion role [Irish Independent, 13 October]
- Doctors have lost moral sense, says Telegraph's doctor-columnist [Telegraph, 13 October]
- Australian March for Babies turns violent: U.S. pro-life activists, MPs assaulted by pro-abort mob [LifeSiteNews.com, 12 October]
- Pope Francis makes pro-life comments in address on women [Vatican Radio, 12 October]
- Legalised euthanasia devalues all life [Scotsman, 14 October]
- Pro-life doctor says press crucial to exposing Liverpool Care Pathway [Mail, 14 October]
- Miss World: "I'm pro-life" and "Sex is for marriage" [LifeSiteNews.com, 14 October]
- Today is International Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day [Wikipedia]