News, 29 August 2002
Protestants and Catholics in Scotland have condemned plans to establish
the UK's first embryonic stem cell bank. A spokesman for the Catholic
Church in Scotland said that the Church was completely opposed both to
the use of embryos in research and to asking parents to donate their
embryos for this purpose. The Church of Scotland's board of social
responsibility, despite its support for IVF fertility treatment, also
condemned the plans, which it said amounted to cannibalism. Meanwhile,
the Liberal Democrats, Britain's third largest political party,
welcomed the news, as did Dr Harry Griffin, assistant director of the
Roslin Institute which cloned Dolly the sheep, and the charity Diabetes
UK. [
The Scotsman and
Liberal Democrat press release, 29 August]
A group of legislators in Iran have tabled a bill which would legalise
abortion in cases of foetal handicap. The legislation would permit
so-called preventative abortions in the first four months of pregnancy
if three doctors certified that an unborn child was "malformed".
Abortion is currently illegal in Iran except to save the mother's life.
On Tuesday the Iranian parliament adopted a measure authorising IVF
treatment for infertile couples, although this still has to be approved
by the conservative Guardians' Council. [AFP, 28 August, via Pro-Life
E-News]
A team of scientists in London has succeeded in making stem cells
extracted from human embryos grow in the laboratory for the first time
in Britain. The scientists are based at King's College London, one of
only two institutions in the UK currently licensed to carry out general
medical experiments on human embryos. Dr Stephen Minger of the Centre
for Neuroscience Research at King's College said: "What I hope we have
here is a population of human embryonic stem cells. I would stress that
it's early days, we have only had these cells in culture for about
three weeks." [The Guardian, 29 August] The UK has some of the most
liberal regulations relating to destructive embryonic research in the
world.
John Howard, the Australian prime minister, is reported to be
reconsidering the $43.6 million government grant he announced in May
for Professor Alan Trounson's Centre for Stem Cells and Tissue Repair
in Melbourne. Professor Trounson has been accused of misleading MPs
about the potential of embryonic stem cell research during the current
debate on a bill to authorise the practice [see
yesterday's news digest].
Members of the House of Representatives, Australia's lower house of
parliament, are now debating whether to split the bill into two
measures so that the proposed ban on human cloning could be voted on
separately. It is reported that a majority of MPs support destructive
embryonic research but oppose human cloning. [
The Canberra Times and
ABC News, 29 August]
China's state family planning commission has denied reports in the
Western media that it plans to abolish its strict population control
policy. The commission stated that the reports were simply not true,
and that its system of birth quotas and permits would remain in place
for the foreseeable future. A spokesman for the commission said that
there might be changes within the next 10 to 20 years if economic
conditions meant that families could afford to have more children, but
that any changes would be incremental and not sudden. [
Straits Times, 24 August] China's coercive population control policy entails forced abortions and widespread use of the abortifacient IUD.
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2010