News, 24 August 2000
President Bill Clinton announced
yesterday that the US government has decided to permit publicly funded
research using human embryos. Accepting new guidelines issued by the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), President Clinton said: "We cannot
walk away from the potential to save lives and improve lives, to help
people literally get up and walk..." The official guidelines stipulate
that scientists will be able to carry out research on stem cells taken
from frozen embryos left over from in vitro fertilisation treatment
[unlike in the UK where the government has announced its support for
research on new, cloned embryos generated for that purpose]. A 1996 US
federal law prohibits public funding of research which involves the
destroying or discarding of human embryos, but the NIH guidelines skirt
this law by recommending public funding only for the research itself
and not for the actual process by which stem cells are removed from an
embryo. Jay Dickey, a Republican member of the US House of
Representatives, described the guidelines as a "boldfaced violation of
the law". He added that President Clinton's concern in supporting the
guidelines "is not so much with science as it is with promoting the
Clinton-Gore pro-abortion agenda". Douglas Johnson, legislative
director of the National Right to Life Committee, said: "There will be
a legal challenge." [The Boston Globe, 23 August; The Washington Times,
24 August; BBC News online, 24 August]
The government of India has rejected calls for
coercive population control measures. A private parliamentary bill
introduced this week proposed the denial of voting rights, health care,
housing loans, access to state education and government jobs to
families with more than two children in order to address what is termed
"unmanageable population growth". C P Thakur, the federal health
minister, said that instead the government favours "promotional and
motivational" measures to promote smaller family sizes. [EWTN News, 23
August]
China's population control policies have come under
fresh criticism after it emerged that family planning officials drowned
a woman's fourth child in full view of her village. Officials had
injected Mrs Liu, from Caidian in Hubei province, with a saline
solution which usually destroys an unborn child's nervous system and
induces labour. Reportedly this is a common procedure in China.
However, in this case the woman gave birth to a healthy boy. His father
refused officials' demands that he should kill his son, after which a
doctor took the baby to a local hospital for vaccinations. When the boy
was returned to his parents, five officials forcefully took him and
drowned him. Villagers then alerted local newspapers. China's one child
family policy has now been in force for 20 years. [The Scotsman, 22
August; Washington Times, 24 August]
The Mexican government's news agency has said that
it will consider fining the country's National Pro-Life Committee after
it invited activists from the USA and Canada to join anti-abortion
protests. Foreigners are prohibited in Mexican law from involvement in
domestic politics. A Canadian newspaper reported that the protesters
have been banned from returning to Mexico for five years. [Calgary
Herald online, 24 August]
The President of Human Life International has
criticised the tendency to blame high teenage pregnancy rates on
insufficient sex education. Commenting on the news that half of British
teenagers who become pregnant had been prescribed the contraceptive
pill, Fr Matthew Habiger said: "Our moral confusion has made it almost
impossible for us to look at the practical problems that are at the
root of our social problems." Fr Habiger argued that surveys have shown
that sex education only encourages sexual activity before youngsters
are sufficiently mature. He concluded: "Yet even with such clear proof
in front of us, some still refuse to see how sex education hurts our
young people. And that may be the biggest tragedy of all." [Zenit news
agency, 23 August]
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, 2012