Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pope Francis Suggests Contraception Can Be Condoned In Zika Crisis

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Feb, 2016 11:41 AM
    Pope Francis has suggested that women threatened with the Zika virus could use artificial contraception, saying there's a clear moral difference between aborting a fetus and preventing a pregnancy.
     
    Francis was asked Wednesday en route home from Mexico if abortion or birth control could be considered a "lesser evil," when confronting the Zika crisis in Brazil, where some babies have been born with abnormally small heads to Zika-infected mothers.
     
    The World Health Organization has declared a global health emergency over the Zika virus and its suspected links to birth defects. The virus has been reported in at least 34 countries, many of them in Central and Latin America. WHO and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have advised pregnant women to consider delaying travel to Zika-infected countries.
     
    The explosion of Zika cases has prompted some governments in Latin America to urge women to avoid getting pregnant and has fueled calls from abortion rights groups to loosen the strict anti-abortion laws in the overwhelmingly Catholic region.
     
    But Francis excluded abortion absolutely from the debate.
     
    "Abortion isn't a lesser evil, it's a crime," he told reporters. "Taking one life to save another, that's what the Mafia does. It's a crime. It's an absolute evil."
     
     
    Francis, however, drew a parallel to the decision taken by Pope Paul VI in the 1960s to approve giving nuns in Belgian Congo artificial contraception to prevent pregnancies because they were being systematically raped.
     
    Abortion "is an evil in and of itself, but it is not a religious evil at its root, no? It's a human evil," he said. "On the other hand, avoiding pregnancy is not an absolute evil. In certain cases, as in this one (Zika), such as the one I mentioned of Blessed Paul VI, it was clear."
     
    Francis has tended to downplay the fraught moral hand-wringing over sexual ethics that preoccupied his predecessors, John Paul II and Benedict XVI. He has said the church shouldn't be the "obsessed" with such issues.
     
    Coming home from Africa last year, Francis similarly dismissed a question about whether condoms could be used in the fight against AIDS. Francis said there were far more pressing issues in Africa, such as poverty and exploitation, to be concerned about and that only when those problems were resolved should questions about condoms and AIDS take centre stage.
     
    Francis, history's first Latin American pope, did urge doctors to come up with a vaccine to prevent Zika from spreading. "This needs to be worked on," he said.
     
     
    Several of Latin America's conservative churchmen have reasserted the church's opposition to both abortion and artificial contraception as more reports of Zika cases and brain-damaged babies emerged.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies

    Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies
    TORONTO — A Scottish man says he's recovering after being attacked by a grizzly bear while climbing in the Rocky Mountains. On his Facebook page, Greg Boswell says he's "OK, just a little shook up and sore."

    Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies

    Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years

    Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years
    OTTAWA — Canadians in oil-producing provinces are having a harder time paying their bills, even as the national delinquency rate improves to its lowest level in more than six years.

    Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years

    Complaints For Wireless Down For First Time While Internet Issues Rise: Watchdog

    Complaints For Wireless Down For First Time While Internet Issues Rise: Watchdog
    TORONTO — Canadians had fewer official complaints about their wireless communication services but more concerns about their Internet plans, according to the latest report from the telecom industry's consumer watchdog.

    Complaints For Wireless Down For First Time While Internet Issues Rise: Watchdog

    Former Calgary Hospital Worker Charged With Accessing Information On 240 People

    Former Calgary Hospital Worker Charged With Accessing Information On 240 People
    EDMONTON — A former Calgary hospital worker is facing 26 counts of accessing the health information of more than 200 people.

    Former Calgary Hospital Worker Charged With Accessing Information On 240 People

    Canadian Woman Honours Stranger Who Died After Paying For Her Groceries

    Canadian Woman Honours Stranger Who Died After Paying For Her Groceries
    Jamie-Lynne Knighten says Matthew Jackson stepped up to pay her $200-bill on Nov. 10 after her credit cards were declined at the cash register.

    Canadian Woman Honours Stranger Who Died After Paying For Her Groceries

    Canada Needs Strategy To Combat Influence Of Money In U.S. Politics: Ambassador

    OTTAWA — Canada's ambassador to the U.S. says this country needs to find a way to combat the influence of big money in American politics, which is getting in the way of the interests of both countries.

    Canada Needs Strategy To Combat Influence Of Money In U.S. Politics: Ambassador