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In Letter to UN, US ‘Categorically Rejects’ Right to Abortion
The letter cited the “actual human rights abuses” occurring in the Chinese province of Xinjiang as something that would be more appropriate for the committee to concern themselves with compared to U.S. abortion policies.
Spanish ‘Hosts Case’ Reveals Europe’s Internal Divisions Over Human Rights
The case, triggered by a controversial government-supported art performance that utilized stolen consecrated hosts, is now before the European Court of Human Rights.
Spanish ‘Hosts Case’ Reveals Europe’s Internal Divisions Over Human Rights
The case, triggered by a controversial government-supported art performance that utilized stolen consecrated hosts, is now before the European Court of Human Rights.
Germany’s Catholic Bishops Agree on Uniform Compensation System for Abuse Victims
At a press conference Thursday, Bishop Bätzing said that abuse victims should receive compensation in recognition of their suffering “without great bureaucratic effort."
Eviction from ‘Virgin Mary Compound’: Iraqi Christians Face Uncertain Future in Baghdad
The Baghdad complex, named after the Virgin Mary, is built on state-owned property, which will be evacuated by the end of this year according to an order from government agencies.
Priests Abducted in Cameroon Last Month Plead for Release in New Video
Archbishop Nkea of Cameroon’s Bamenda Archdiocese says the abductors “see the Church as a soft target to be able to make money.”
Catholic Doctor Criticizes Pontifical Academy for Life’s Appointing of Abortion Advocates
Dr. José María Simón Castellví is president emeritus of the International Federation of Catholic Medical Associations.
In Quebec’s COVID Response, the Catholic Church Has Been Completely Marginalized
COMMENTARY: In Canada, civil authorities and the Church have collaborated, negotiated and even litigated over pandemic protocols. Yet in the province of Quebec, the Church was being ignored.
Father José Luis Soria, RIP: St. Josemaría Escrivá’s Saintly Doctor
COMMENTARY: The Opus Dei priest, a medical doctor who was at St. Josemaría’s bedside when he died in Rome in 1975, was widely regarded as a canonizable saint himself long before his death earlier this month in Vancouver.
