News, 18 December 2000
48 members of the European parliament from 14 of the 15 countries
which make up the European Union have jointly written a letter
criticising the British government for its plans to authorise research
on cloned human embryos. The letter, published in Saturday's
Daily
Telegraph, expresses alarm at the move and cites the frequent and
clear opposition to all forms of human cloning expressed by the
European parliament and other European institutions. The letter
concludes: "Many of us are doctors, scientists and former ministers.
We all believe that we need new treatments for patients suffering from
such conditions as Parkinson's or Alzheimer's, but we think the
government is wrong. There are equally promising scientific
alternatives that are ethically acceptable, such as adult stem cell
research. We strongly urge MPs to vote against the government's
proposals." [
Daily Telegraph, 16 December] Members of the British
House of Commons will vote on the government's statutory instrument
which would authorise research on cloned human embryos for so-called
therapeutic purposes tomorrow at 7pm. SPUC has urged all pro-lifers in
the UK to contact their MPs urgently to ask them to vote against this
legislation.
Ms Ruth Kelly, Labour MP for Bolton West, was one of many members of
the British House of Commons who criticised plans to authorise
research on cloned human embryos during an adjournment debate last
Friday. She quoted prime minister Tony Blair when he said, "What has
history taught us? That science can be used for evil as well as good.
And that judgement can be prejudiced as well as measured. Science
without judgement can be dangerous." Ms Kelly then argued that
effective regulation of the technology would be impossible and that it
would eventually lead to reproductive cloning. She stressed the
potential of adult stem cell research and asked: "Should we choose an
ethical route, which could lead to great improvement in the quality of
life for hundreds of thousands of people with serious diseases, or a
highly controversial route, which ... does not command the support
[of] the country and which is backed by a biotechnology industry with
huge commercial interests at stake?" [
Hansard, 15 December]
It has emerged that one of the largest secondary schools in Britain
has been making the abortifacient morning-after pill available for
three months to pupils as young as 11 without the knowledge of
parents. Mr Michael Crane, headteacher of the 2,000-pupil John Port
comprehensive school in Etwall, Derbyshire, confirmed that a school
nurse would dispense the drug to any pupil aged 11 to 18, although the
South Derbyshire Community Health Trust said that the initiative was
aimed at pupils over 14. [
Daily Mail, 16 December] The morning-after
pill has been available without prescription in southern Derbyshire
since August as part of a trial scheme [see
news digest for 25
August]. The government plans to make it available without
prescription throughout the UK to girls over 16 from the first of next
month.
The archbishop of Bogotá, Colombia, has condemned the guerrilla group
known as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia after it emerged
that the group had fitted abortifacient intrauterine devices into
captured girls. The devices were found in the bodies of nine so-called
girls of war aged between 14 and 16 after they were killed during a
recent battle with Colombia's army. [Catholic News Service, 15
December]
The Catholic bishop of Auckland, New Zealand, has revealed that at
least 72 women have so far chosen to become mothers as a result of his
scheme to help pregnant women who were undecided about whether to
obtain an abortion. Bishop Pat Dunn started his initiative last March,
saying that it would "allow women the right and freedom to choose life
instead of death". Nine months on, Bishop Dunn commented: "It is a
small-scale thing but it is quite touching ... when you actually see a
child and the mother will say, 'I was going to have an abortion.'"
[
The New Zealand Herald, 15 December]
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