News, 20 December 2000
The British House of Commons voted yesterday evening by a majority of
more than two to one in favour of destructive research on cloned human
embryos. The government's statutory instrument was passed by 366 votes
to 174, and will now be considered by the House of Lords. Tony Blair,
the prime minister, voted for the legislation, as did John Major, the
former prime minister. William Hague, leader of the Conservative
opposition, voted against the measure while Charles Kennedy, leader of
the Liberal Democrats, did not register a vote. In total, 76 Labour MPs
voted against the government proposals, on a free vote, including Paul
Murphy, secretary of state for Wales, and two other ministers.
Archbishop Cormac Murphy-O'Connor of Westminster, leader of Roman
Catholics in England and Wales, said that he was "gravely concerned
that this extremely important moral issue is being pushed through
parliament without the country having had time to debate the very
serious implications." John Smeaton, national director of SPUC,
described the vote as "deeply disturbing" and commented: "It is a sad
day for ethical standards in science and respect for innocent human
life in Britain. This country has cast itself into uncharted ethical
waters. It has also broken ranks with European political opinion, which
is squarely opposed to all forms of human cloning." Mr Smeaton said
that the result was due to insufficient time for debate in the House of
Commons and added: "The House of Lords should give this matter deep
consideration and should reject the statutory instrument when it is
laid before them." [BBC News online, eye-witness reports and SPUC media
release, 19 December;
Daily Mail, 20 December]
The director of China's state family planning commission has admitted
that his country's one-child family policy has led to forced abortions,
sex-selective abortions and infanticide. Launching a population policy
white paper, Zhang Weiqing conceded that the ratio of 111.3 newborn
boys to 100 newborn girls was a result of sex selective abortion and
the abandonment of newly born female children. However, he said that
China would continue with its policy and insisted: "We've always been
opposed to coercion in these cases and we are extremely opposed to
induced [sic] abortion." [
Taipei Times, 20 December 2000]
Swedish researchers have warned that women who drink more than four
cups of coffee a day during early pregnancy double their chances of
suffering a miscarriage. Professor Sven Cnattingius of the Karolinska
Institute in Stockholm also reported that drinking between two and
three cups of coffee a day increased the risks of miscarriage by
between 30 and 40 percent. A spokesman for the Coffee News Information
Service commented that the study had demonstrated an association but
not a causal link between caffeine and miscarriage. [BBC News online,
20 December]
Pope John Paul II has criticised the new European Charter of
Rights for its failure in protecting the right to life of the unborn
and vulnerable. In a letter to Cardinal Antonio Maria Javierre Ortas,
the Pope wrote: "The defence of the rights of the person and the
family, in particular, could have been more courageous ... In many
European states they are threatened, for example, by policies favouring
abortion, which is legalised almost everywhere, by attitudes which
consider euthanasia as ever more possible and, finally, by certain
projects of law in the matter of genetic technology which are not
sufficiently respectful of the human quality of the embryo." [LifeSite
Daily News, 19 December]
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