News, 30 May 2000
A narrow majority of people in the UK disapprove of abortion if it is
simply because a couple do not want more children or if the woman is
unmarried. The opinion poll commissioned by the BBC also showed that 92
percent supported abortion if the mother's life were at risk, and that
65 percent supported the abortion of children who would be born
physically handicapped. [Daily Mail, 29 May] John Smeaton, National
Director of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children,
observed, "Though we have not yet seen the full details of this latest
poll, it is clear that it will be a disappointment to the pro-abortion
lobby, which claimed in 1995 that only 24% of people disapproved of
abortion on demand."
A laboratory at the forefront of the global project to decode the human
genetic code has announced the appointment of a new director. The
Sanger Centre in Cambridge, UK, will now be headed by Professor Allan
Bradley. The project is already 85 percent complete, and the important
90 percent milestone will probably be reached next month. The Sanger
Centre is at the hub of the international and publicly funded Human
Genome Project. Presently they are in a race with Celera, a private
American company engaged in the same research, and Professor Bradley
described the work as the biggest scientific and technological race
since the drive to put a man on the moon. [Daily Telegraph, 30 May]
Scientists have discovered a way of creating unlimited brain cells
which could be used to reverse the symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Dr
Ronald McKay of the National Institutes of Health in America headed a
team which turned stem cells taken from the embryos of mice into brain
cells capable of producing dopamine, the chemical messenger involved in
controlling movement. The same technique could be applied to human
embryos. It would not be necessary to clone new embryos each time to
produce brain cells for transplant to treat Parkinson's, although an
embryo would have to be used to provide the original stem cells. [Daily
Telegraph, 30 May]
A British newspaper has reported that an old people's home conducted
what it described as "a live-or-let-die ballot" among relatives of its
elderly residents. The privately run Mayfield Nursing Home in
Merseyside issued questionnaires to the families asking them whether
paramedics should be called when residents had suffered "apparent
death" or if instead they should be allowed to pass away "in dignity".
The home insisted that the questionnaires were not intended to
formulate policy. [Sunday Mirror, 28 May]
The Catholic archbishop of Barcelona has condemned proposals by the
Catalan parliament to accept euthanasia. Cardinal Ricard Maria Carles
said, "That which worsens the person, which makes the person vile, is
not progress, it is a step backwards." Countering those who present
euthanasia as progress, he continued, "No, this is a return to the
cultures of a thousand years ago." [EWTN News, 25 May]
Campaigners for euthanasia in the American state of Maine have
succeeded in obtaining sufficient signatures for a ballot on assisted
suicide to be included in the main November election ballot. The
question will read: "Should a terminally ill adult, who is of sound
mind, be allowed to ask for and receive a doctor's help to die." The
Catholic Church, the Maine Medical Association and the Maine Hospice
Council are all opposing the initiative. [CNS News online, 28 May]
American presidential candidate George W Bush has affirmed his
opposition to abortion. In an address to the Catholic Press Association
he said, "A truly welcoming society must be a culture of life. We must
appreciate the dignity of life in all its seasons ... and look toward
the day when every child, born and unborn, is welcome in life and
protected in law." In a separate statement, the Republican governor of
Texas also said that he would support the continued status of the Holy
See as a permanent observer at the United Nations. He observed, "In
world affairs the Holy See has long been an influence for the good and
never more than in the last two decades." [Associated Press, Reuters,
26 May; from Pro-Life Infonet]
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