News, 7 December 2000
The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC) learned today
that a vote in parliament on the British government's proposals to
allow research on cloned human embryos is likely to take place on
Wednesday 20 December. This follows an announcement earlier today that
another adjournment debate on embryology will be held in the House of
Commons tomorrow-week (15 December). John Smeaton, SPUC's
national director, pointed out that most MPs would be away from
parliament on the day of the adjournment debate, a fact which further
demonstrated the government's desperation to avoid debate on this
controversial issue. Mr Smeaton also wondered why the promised
legislation to outlaw reproductive cloning was omitted from yesterday's
Queen's speech. He observed that the government's proposals went even
further than the recommendations of the Donaldson committee into
cloning, and said: "The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act was
enacted six years ago after the Warnock report, yet this government
can't even allow six weeks to debate the destruction of countless
human embryos." [
SPUC media release, 7 December]
The parents of Siamese twins Jodie and Mary have spoken about their
recent experiences for the first time. Michaelangelo and Rina Attard
from Gozo, Malta, received 150,000 pounds for an interview to be
screened as part of the
Tonight with Trevor McDonald programme on
British national television this evening. The parents described how
they held Mary's body after she had been killed in the operation to
separate the twins. Mr Attard said that Jodie was growing stronger
every day, but that "she might realise something is missing from her".
He continued: "We still love them the same, they are both our
daughters." [
BBC News online, 7 December]
Two early day motions have been tabled in the British House of Commons
which call for the withdrawal of the government's proposals to
authorise research on cloned human embryos for so-called therapeutic
purposes. The first motion, which is entitled
Request for full debate
on human cloning and has so far attracted 14 signatories, denies
government claims that issues relating to cloning were sufficiently
covered during the original debate on the Human Fertilisation and
Embryology Bill in 1990 and affirms that members of parliament should
have adequate opportunity to consider "these issues of profound
ethical importance". The second motion, which is simply entitled
Human cloning and has so far attracted 35 signatories, also regrets
the lack of debate and urges the withdrawal of the statutory
instrument until such time as "this House and the people of this
country have had a full opportunity to judge the long-term
implications of human cloning." [House of Commons
Hansard, 6 December]
Researchers in the US have claimed that 75 percent of the patients
whom Dr Jack Kevorkian, the American euthanasia advocate, helped to
die were not terminally ill. A team from the University of South
Florida looked into 69 cases of so-called assisted suicide involving
Dr Kevorkian and found that only 17 of the patients were likely to
have had less than six months to live. Dr Kevorkian was involved in
more than 100 cases of assisted suicide or euthanasia in Michigan
between 1990 and 1998. He was convicted of second degree murder in
April of last year and sent to prison for 10 to 25 years after he allowed
himself to be filmed administering a lethal injection. [Reuters, 6
December; from Pro-Life Infonet]
The province of Anhui in eastern China has banned sex-selective
abortions for so-called non-medical purposes. The law, which came into
effect last month, prohibits clinics and family planning agencies from
using ultrasound equipment to ascertain the sex of an unborn child,
unless it is deemed necessary for so-called medical purposes [
e.g. to
abort babies of a certain sex who might be carrying a hereditary
disease]. The new regulations also prohibit all abortions after the
16th week of pregnancy, except in cases of "serious disfigurement" or
a threat to the life of the mother. [
Chinese People's Daily online, 6
December; from Pro-Life Infonet]
A judge in Missouri has ruled that the state's Infant's Protection
Act, which seeks to outlaw partial birth abortions, does not prevent
any other form of abortion and does contain an exception to protect
the health of the mother. The ruling has been regarded as a victory
for the state as it continues to argue for the law's constitutionality
in the light of the US Supreme Court ruling earlier this year which
threw out Nebraska's more rigid partial-birth abortion ban. Planned
Parenthood is challenging the law and may also appeal against the St
Louis circuit judge's ruling. [
St Louis Post-Dispatch, 5 December;
from Pro-Life Infonet]
The health minister of New Brunswick, Canada, has confirmed that the
province will continue to refuse to fund abortions in private clinics,
despite claims that the policy violates federal law. New Brunswick is
reportedly the only province in Canada which refuses to recognise
private abortion facilities. It funds abortions at only two hospitals
and requires the recommendation of two doctors in each case. Henry
Morgentaler [a prominent Canadian abortionist] runs his own private
clinic in New Brunswick and described the province's policy as "an
obscene kind of attitude". [
CBC News, 7 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