News, 4 December 2000
A man who confessed to the so-called mercy killing of his terminally
ill mother during a local radio phone-in programme has been questioned
by British police. The man phoned the programme on BBC Radio Sheffield
last Thursday during a discussion on euthanasia to reveal that he had
administered an overdose of liquid morphine to his dying mother four
years ago. South Yorkshire police obtained a high court order
requiring the BBC to divulge the name of the caller, who was then
interviewed by Derbyshire police. Enquiries are continuing and the
coroner had been informed. [
BBC News online, 3 December]
A British national newspaper has claimed that the government is so
worried that a vote to authorise destructive research on cloned human
embryos could be lost in parliament that it has been conducting
"intense behind-the-scenes lobbying of MPs and peers".
The Independent
on Sunday said that a vote must take place soon, but that government
ministers were "anticipating a backlash ... fuelled by Catholic
bishops and other campaigners". Yvette Cooper, public health minister,
and Lord Hunt, her counterpart in the House of Lords, have written to
all parliamentarians and have held private meetings with more than 100
MPs. Dr Liam Fox, the opposition's health spokesman, criticised the
government for moving ahead with its plans without sufficient debate.
[
Independent on Sunday, 3 December]
A member of the Church of England's general synod has described
destructive research on cloned human embryos as "morally acceptable".
In a briefing paper prepared for the Church of England's Board for
Social Responsibility, Canon Dr John Polkinghorne [who in the late
1980s drew up guidelines for abortionists on the use of foetal tissue
in research, and who is now chairman of the Board for Social
Responsibility's science and medical technology committee] dismissed
concerns that such research would start a slippery slope towards
reproductive cloning and suggested that so-called therapeutic cloning
was no more unnatural than a heart transplant. Richard Harries,
Anglican bishop of Oxford and chairman of the Board for Social
Responsibility, will now consider whether to approve the paper for
release. [
Sunday Telegraph, 3 December] The Catholic bishops of
England and Wales have made their condemnation of government proposals
to authorise destructive cloning research clear. In a pastoral letter
read out in all the churches of his diocese yesterday, Bishop Thomas
McMahon of Brentwood insisted that life issues were a priority in the
year ahead and affirmed that all human embryos, whether conceived
naturally or generated through cloning, were "not potential human
beings but human beings with potential".
Dutch abortionist Rebecca Gomperts has claimed that she is well on the
way towards providing a floating abortion clinic with her Women on the
Waves Foundation. She plans to offer abortions to women in countries
where abortions are illegal, such as Malta, by mooring her boat nearby
in international waters. She needed 190,000 dollars to charter a ship
for the purpose, but she claims that a 50,000 dollar mobile abortion
clinic has already been made ready to be put onto a ship. [
New York
Times, 1 December; via Pro-Life Infonet] See news digests for
25 May
and
15 June.
Cardinal Bernard Law, archbishop of Boston, USA, has criticised
politicians who claim to be personally opposed to abortion but who
fail to vote against it. Speaking at a conference in Rome, the cardinal
insisted that the Gospel must not be separated from daily life, and
that the culture of death could only be overcome "by the unambiguous
affirmation of the inviolability of every human life." [
LifeSite News,
1 December]
The American Medical Association is considering whether to recommend
the reclassification of the morning-after pill as an over-the-counter
drug available from pharmacists. The Association's council on medical
service has recommended the reclassification, claiming that the drug
is "considered safe and effective by the medical community as a whole".
Meanwhile, the morning-after pill became available over the counter
from pharmacists in British Columbia, Canada, last Friday (1
December). [
Yahoo!,
LifeSite]
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