CAMPAIGNERS
Soaring
promiscuity and STIs among pupils the Government must
act now
LIFE, the UK’s leading pro-life charity, is calling on the Government
to act now following the Royal College of Nursing’s research highlighting
how a generation of pupils are being pressured into early sexual activity.
A Life spokesperson said: "When will this Government realise that their
relentless promotion of value-free sex education to children and access to
contraceptives and abortion is a major cause of this alarming rise in teenage
promiscuity?
"The RCN’s paper also blames TV soaps and magazines for the pressure
upon young people to have sex. Increasingly children are finding themselves
without family support, and turn to their peers and popular culture for guidance.
"The Government has a responsibility to monitor the media, particularly
TV and magazines, for inappropriate content for children. Magazines aimed
at children as young as 12 often contain sexually explicit information and TV
soaps are no better.
"The RCN believes that there is tremendous pressure upon young people to
be sexually active at an early age. Children are emotionally and physically
ill-equipped to deal with sexual relationships and are getting hurt. STI
and abortion rates are soaring and the psychological damage to teenagers is immeasurable.
"We are urging once again that the Government changes its approach to the
problem. Young people should be encouraged to value their childhood and
pursue activities in-keeping with their age. A generation is growing up
feeling under-valued with little or no notion of the true value of sex in a committed
relationship such as marriage.
"In their heart of hearts, the RCN’s nurses do not want to be advising
children on sexual matters (and picking up the pieces when things inevitably
go wrong). The Government owes it to our young people to stop throwing condoms
at the problem and to deal with it in a life-enhancing way that really works."
The
call comes hard on the heels of a plea by John Beyer, director
of mediawatch-uk, for the main political parties to address
the issue of violence and pornography in film and on TV.
"Many
people care deeply about standards in entertainment and are concerned
about the portrayal of violence, the use of obscene language and
the display of nudity and sexual intimacy on television," he
said. "We believe the quality of our culture matters and that
television, in particular, is promoting violence and uncivilised
behaviour ... we look to the politicians to safeguard our interests
against the very powerful TV and film industries, and we have a
right to expect some commitments on these important national issues."
More
at www.lifeuk.org and www.mediawatchuk.org
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