News, 1 December 2000
Two more studies suggest that adult bone marrow cells can be used as
an alternative to human embryos and so-called therapeutic cloning.
Both studies were published in today's
Science journal. Dr Helen
Blau and her team at Stanford University suggest that cells derived
from bone marrow naturally migrate into several regions of the brain,
and that a normal brain is in fact maintained by such cells. This
means that stem cells extracted from adult bone marrow could be used
to replace damaged brain cells, and thus to treat a variety of brain
diseases. Dr Eva Mezey of the US National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke shows how the descendants of bone marrow cells
injected into mice converted into nerve cells in the brain four months
later. [
The Daily Telegraph and
BBC News online, 1 December]
The Japanese parliament has passed a bill which appears to outlaw
human cloning. The law, which passed the lower house in November, was
passed in the upper house by 229 votes to 11. It specifically outlaws
reproductive cloning and also prohibits the creation of any human
embryo by inserting somatic cells into an unfertilised egg [presumably
whether or not the resulting cloned embryo is later implanted inside a
woman]. The law also bans the creation of hybrid embryos with human
and animal cells. However, the legislation calls on the government to
draw up guidelines to govern cloning technology and one British
newspaper described this as "an apparent loophole... [which] allows
the use of human embryos or cells for research purposes under
conditions strictly defined by the government". [Zenit news agency, 30
November;
Daily Mail, 1 December]
The French national assembly voted yesterday in favour of legislation
to increase the legal gestational time-limit for abortions from 10 to
12 weeks. Debate is continuing on another section of the same bill
which concerns whether minors should need parental consent before
obtaining abortions. [
CNN online, 30 November]
The Catholic bishops of the Netherlands have added their voice to
condemnations of the vote this week in the lower house of the Dutch
parliament to legalise euthanasia. A statement issued by the bishops
stated that "the law proposed endangers the protection of life for all
the members of society" and insisted that "the principle of protecting
all human life ... has always been fundamental in our society". [
EWTN
News, 30 November] A Catholic news agency has asserted that Holland is
by no means the only country where euthanasia is legally permitted or
tolerated. To 'assist in suicide' is not a crime punishable by law in
Sweden, and in France euthanasia is now admitted in "exceptional
cases". The constitutional court in Colombia authorised euthanasia in
May 1997 for terminally ill patients who specifically requested it,
and in China euthanasia is practised on terminally ill patients in
hospital. [
Zenit news agency, via EWTN news, 30 November]
The French government plans to introduce legislation to permit
research on human embryos. Prime Minister Lionel Jospin said that the
proposed law, which would be submitted to parliament next year, would
authorise research to improve
in vitro fertilisation techniques and
also to develop the use of embryonic stem cells to treat incurable
conditions in adults. A French law passed in 1994 currently bans any
research using human embryos. Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, archbishop
of Paris, condemned the plans, which he said would "mortally offend
the respect due to that which on this earth has absolute value, the
human being". [Zenit news agency, 30 November]
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