News, 17 August 2000
Cardinal Thomas Winning, archbishop of Glasgow and chairman of the
Bioethics Committee of the Catholic bishops of Great Britain and
Ireland, has said that the British government's support for human
cloning "will shock and disappoint many". He insisted that "obtaining
stem cells from a human embryo is morally wrong because it involves the
destruction of a human life" and added, "Human life is inviolably
sacred, both before and after any arbitrary 14 day deadline." The Daily
Telegraph newspaper also came out against the government's plans in its
editorial. It described the Donaldson committee's report on cloning as
containing "evasive language and weird logic" and concluded that "there
are no proven benefits in killing and cloning, and that science is too
important to be left only to the scientists." Various medical research
groups supported the proposals, as did a number of other national
newspapers. [Daily Telegraph, 17 August; Archdiocese of Glasgow news
release, 16 August]
The National Institutes of Health in the USA is reportedly pushing for
the authorisation of federal funding for human embryo stem cell
research. This would involve the killing of those human embryos used.
The Clinton administration is said to be supportive of the plan, as is
Al Gore, the Democratic presidential candidate. George W Bush, the
Republican presidential candidate, reportedly opposes it and could
block it by means of an executive order were he elected. Arlen Specter,
a Republican senator from Pennsylvania, has sponsored a bill which
would explicitly allow the use of embryos left over from in vitro
fertilisation treatment for research by government-funded scientists,
but members of congress opposed to the move hope to block it. [The
Inquirer, 14 August; Reuters, Yahoo! News, 16 August]
The supreme court of New Jersey, USA, has struck down a law which
required minors to notify their parents before seeking an abortion. The
Parental Notification for Abortion Act was passed last year and
required only parental notice, not consent, but it never took effect.
Chief Justice Deborah Poritz explained the 4-2 majority opinion of the
court thus: "A young woman's right to choose, to personal dignity and
autonomy, is embedded in the liberties found in the constitutions of
the United States and of this state." [Ashbury Park Press & Nando
Media, 15 August]
Following news that the mayor of Mexico City had approved the
liberalisation of abortion laws, the city's Catholic archbishop has
strongly condemned any such move. Cardinal Norberto Rivera said:
"Anyone who promotes or practises abortion, including legislators and
governors, will be excommunicated by the Church." [Miami Herald, 15
August]
A prominent American rabbi has publicly criticised Joe Lieberman,
Democratic vice-presidential candidate and an Orthodox Jew, for his
views on abortion. Rabbi Yehuda Levin, who founded the Jews for
Morality website, paid particular attention to Mr Lieberman's support
for partial-birth abortions and said: "There's no way in the world that
any Orthodox Jew could possibly support something so horrific."
[NewsMax.com, 12 August; from LifeSite Daily News]
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