News, 13 August 2002
An investigation by the BBC has revealed that a Swiss company is
helping foreign nationals to commit suicide in Zurich. A report on last
night's Newsnight programme on British national television revealed
that Dignitas, a company based in Zurich, has so far assisted over 100
terminally, chronically or psychologically ill people from different
countries to commit suicide. As well as offering an introduction to a
doctor who can provide the lethal drugs, the firm also provides an
apartment in Zurich where the suicide can take place. While assisted
suicide is legal in Switzerland, making a profit from it is not.
Instead, Dignitas charges a £10 membership fee. [
BBC Newsnight programme, 12 August; Daily Telegraph, 13 August]
The social issues agency of the United Methodist Church has strongly
criticised the US government's decision to block federal funding of the
pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). Jim Winkler,
leader of the denomination's board of church and society, described the
decision as "a frontal assault on women and the United Nations" and
criticised President Bush's administration for "caving in to extremist
forces". [
LifeSite, 12 August]
The official position of the UMC, which is the second largest
protestant denomination in the United States, is that abortion may be
permitted after "prayerful consideration by the parties involved"
because "devastating damage may result from an unacceptable pregnancy".
[
UMC website]
Muslim leaders in The Gambia have denounced attempts to limit
population growth by means of indiscriminate distribution of birth
control devices. Banding Drammeh, president of the Supreme Islamic
Council, told a conference on population issues that the provision of
birth control devices to youngsters and unmarried couples was
"completely un-Islamic or irreligious". [IPPF News, 9 August] Many
birth control methods are abortifacient, such as the morning-after pill
and the IUD.
The governing body of the American Bar Association (ABA) will
decide this week whether to endorse destructive experimentation on
cloned human embryos. The proposal before the ABA, the largest lawyers'
organisation in the US, would endorse cloning "to advance human health"
and condemn moves to criminalise destructive research into so-called
therapeutic cloning. If the board recommends the proposal, it could
still be amended or defeated by the ABA's full House of Delegates.
Legislation to ban all human cloning remains stalled in the US Senate. [
AP, via Yahoo! News, and
LifeSite, 12 August]
A team at Loughborough university in England has been awarded £145,000
by the UK's Engineering and Physical Science Research Council to design
a car seat-belt which is both comfortable and safe for use by pregnant
women. It is thought that a significant number of unborn children have
died in car crashes, either because their mother was not wearing a
seat-belt or because pressure exerted by the seat-belt itself caused
internal injuries. [Daily Telegraph, 10 August]
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