News, 13 January 2003
The Roman Catholic archbishop of Glasgow has said that human cloning is
a further step down the "nightmarish journey" that began with the
advent of in vitro fertilisation (IVF). Mario Conti, archbishop of
Scotland's largest city and a member of the British and Irish Catholic
bishops' joint bioethics committee, observed that human cloning would
not be an issue today "were it not for the fact that we have already
crossed several moral boundaries before finally coming to an
instinctive halt on the brink of reproductive cloning". In an article
for a Scottish newspaper, Archbishop Conti wrote that one moral problem
had succeeded another, starting with the British government's
acceptance of IVF, "namely the production of human beings in the petri
dish", and culminating in the UK parliament's decision two years ago to
authorise the creation of cloned human embryos for the purposes of
destructive research. [
Sunday Herald, 12 January]
A court in Florida has ordered a vice-president of the Clonaid company,
which has claimed to have produced the world's first born-alive cloned
baby, to disclose the whereabouts of the child and her mother. If
Thomas Kaenzig does not appear before 22 January, he will be held in
contempt of court. The action has been taken after Bernard Siegel, an
attorney, filed a lawsuit requesting the state of Florida to appoint a
guardian for the child. The lawsuit claims that the child is being
commercially exploited and may need specialist medical care. [AP, 11
January; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
Please see a correction to this item in the news dated 15 January.
A representative of the US Catholic bishops has welcomed the
re-introduction of legislation in Congress to ban all forms of human
cloning. Cathleen Cleaver, spokeswoman for the bishops' pro-life
secretariat, said that a comprehensive cloning ban was necessary to
prevent cloning for research purposes. Ms Cleaver pointed out that,
while so-called reproductive cloning was aimed at producing a
born-alive infant, cloning for research required "a 100% prenatal death
rate". She also observed that cloning required the extraction of
massive numbers of eggs from women, and that making women
"egg-factories for this research" was "an utterly demeaning
proposition". [
Zenit, 12 January]
The leader of a party in Norway's coalition government has started an
investigation after the country's department for international aid
provided her with inflated statistics for worldwide abortion-related
maternal deaths. Mrs Valgerd Svarstad Haugland, leader of the Christian
People's Party and government minister of culture and church, defended
the Norwegian government's support for "safe" abortions in developing
world countries by claiming that 800,000 women died every year as a
result of medically improper abortions. However, a reporter then
informed her that this figure was 130 times higher than some estimates
and 11.5 times higher even than estimated by the pro-abortion United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). [
LifeSite, 9 January]
Inflated claims of abortion-related deaths among women are a common
ploy of pro-abortionists in their campaign to have abortion legalised.
Researchers in England have suggested that unborn children whose
mothers have a high-fat diet during pregnancy could be at an increased
risk of developing heart problems in later life. Dr Paul Taylor of
Tommy's Maternal and Foetal Research Unit at St Thomas's Hospital in
London said that research on rats had indicated that a diet high in
animal fat during pregnancy could cause permanent metabolic and
cardiovascular abnormalities in a developing foetus, and that female
offspring might be more vulnerable to such effects than males. [
BBC News online, 13 January]
Pro-abortionists have criticised the Spanish prime minister's wife for
her pro-life views after she announced her candidacy in municipal
elections in Madrid. Ana Botella, wife of José María Aznar, is well
known for her conservative Catholic opinions. [
New York Times, 9 January; Daily Telegraph, 10 January]
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