News, 28 January 2003
The chairman of the UK's Voluntary Euthanasia Society (VES) has claimed
that a third of all deaths in Britain are doctor-assisted. Dr Michael
Irwin, who is a former general practitioner, said that he had
congratulated fellow GPs who had administered lethal injections to
terminally ill patients, but refused to identify them. Last week an
internet poll of over 1,000 doctors conducted on behalf of the VES
indicated that more than half of them believed that people should be
allowed to seek medical help to die. Two in five respondents had been
asked by a patient to help them to die, but only a third believed that
the law should be changed to sanction assisted suicide. [Telegraph
online, 26 January;
BBC News online, 24 January]
Pro-lifers have reacted with astonishment after it emerged that an
ancient Catholic university supports destructive stem cell research on
human embryos. The Catholic university of Louvain in Belgium, which was
founded by a papal bull in 1425, features a French-language document on
its website asserting that parents can "in an ethical spirit of
solidarity" donate their surplus IVF embryos to research. The document
even appears to condone so-called therapeutic cloning. [
LifeSite, 27 January]
John Smeaton, national director of SPUC, said that he was deeply
troubled by the document and would be writing urgently to the Belgian
bishops and to the Vatican about the matter. The Catholic Church is
unequivocally opposed to any destructive research on human embryos, as
well as to IVF, on the basis that all human beings from the moment of
conception/fertilisation have a fundamental dignity by virtue of their
Creator.
Authorities in the Republic of Ireland are to start extradition
proceedings against an American Unitarian minister who has admitted to
assisting in the suicide of an Irish woman. The police have asked the
director of public prosecutions to seek the extradition of Rev George
Exoo, whom they suspect of pumping helium gas into a so-called exit bag
fitted over the head of Rosemary O'Toole in Ireland last year. If the
minister is found guilty under the 1993 Criminal Law (Suicide) Act, he
could face up to 14 years in an Irish prison. Rev Exoo is suspected of
assisting in the suicides of over 100 people around the world. [
Observer, 26 January]
The annual report of the Cardinal Winning Pro-Life Initiative (PLI) has
revealed that 526 babies have been saved from abortion since it was set
up in 1997. The scheme, which was launched by the late Cardinal Thomas
Winning, archbishop of Glasgow, offers financial and material support
to pregnant women who would otherwise see no option other than
abortion. 109 babies were born to 93 mothers helped by the PLI last
year, including a record 16 pairs of twins. 20 mothers who have
received assistance from the scheme are now running a nursery at the
PLI's new centre in Glasgow. Praising the Cardinal's scheme, Frances
Shand Kydd, mother of the late Diana, Princess of Wales, commented:
"There were those who said his scheme would neither last nor save many
souls. Now we have 526 reasons to be grateful to his great foresight." [
Sunday Mail, 26 January]
A county judge in Pennsylvania has upheld murder charges against a
woman accused of killing a love rival's unborn baby of 15 weeks'
gestation. The accused woman's lawyers had argued that murder charges
should not be brought because the unborn child was not considered a
person and could not have survived outside the womb. However, the judge
ruled that the state's foetal homicide law allowed murder charges to be
brought for the killing of an unborn child at any stage of pregnancy,
and that the legality of abortion did not change matters because
abortion entailed a free choice on the part of the mother. [
AP, 26 January; via Northern Light]
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