News, 22 December 2000
A senior Vatican bishop and bioethicist has delivered a strongly worded
attack on the vote by members of the British House of Commons to
authorise destructive stem cell research on cloned human embryos.
Bishop Elio Sgreccia, vice president of the Pontifical Academy for Life
and director of the bioethics institute at Rome's Catholic University,
described the vote as a "criminal act, catastrophic for the future of
humanity". He insisted that "to legitimize the suppression of human
beings, our own children, for the purpose of experimentation represents
a trauma for humanity never seen before". He also rejected the notion
that embryos younger than 14 days old were not human beings, describing
this as "in addition to a crime against life, a crime against truth."
Bishop Sgreccia made the point that the decision violated European
conventions for bioethical practice, and concluded: "It is necessary to
abolish this decision from European history. If we do not reverse
directions, we are creating a whirlpool that will gobble up human
beings." [Zenit, 21 December]
Research which has demonstrated the potential of adult stem cells
to convert into different types of tissue has been accorded fifth place
in a respected top ten of the year's most important scientific
advances. The top ten was published in the US magazine
Science,
which publishes the run-down every year. The magazine highlighted the
fact that prior to this year it had been thought that adult cells could
not be converted into other types of cell, but that various studies
over the past 12 months had demonstrated this assumption to be false.
The magazine's editors decided that genome sequencing was the most
important advance in the year 2000. [
BBC News online, 21 December;
Daily Telegraph,
22 December] Adult stem cell technology provides an ethical alternative
to the use of embryonic stem cells and so-called therapeutic cloning.
Mr Alan Milburn, the British secretary of state for health, has
stressed the importance of a woman's right to choose [an abortion]
during a debate in the British House of Commons on adoption. Mr
Christopher Chope, the Conservative MP for Christchurch, asked Mr
Milburn whether he thought "that many more children would be born
rather than aborted if the system enabled the birth mother to identify
prospective adoptive parents in advance". Mr Milburn appeared to skirt
the question and replied: "...what counts is choice. He does not have the
right to make the choice for others any more than I do. It is the
woman's right to make the choice, and she should be free to do so." [
Hansard, 21 December]
Research published in the
British Medical Journal has
suggested that male unborn children are more vulnerable to damage
inside the womb than female unborn children. The study by Sebastian
Kraemer, a consultant psychiatrist at an English hospital, also
asserted that boys are born four to six weeks less developed than
girls. [
Reuters, via Yahoo! News, 21 December]
A national opinion poll conducted in the United States by Zogby has
indicated that 58 percent of the population would like to see the
president sign a federal ban on partial-birth abortions. [
LifeSite Daily News, 21 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