News, 2 June 2000
A new study has demonstrated that it may not be necessary to use cloned
human embryos in order to produce cells and tissues for transplants.
The research, carried out by Dr Jonas Frisen and his team at the
Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, and published in the journal
Science, suggests that adult stem cells may be as versatile as
embryonic stem cells and so could be converted into different types of
cell without the need for an embryo to be produced by cloning.
Professor Richard Gardner of Oxford University said that the discovery
might change the nature of the cloning debate. He said, "I think
therapeutic cloning is not terribly realistic. This other approach
makes sense." [Daily Telegraph, 2 June]
The Holy Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church has told its priests to
refuse Holy Communion to doctors and midwives known to perform
abortions. The synod's letter stated: "Abortion is a grievous sin
before God, condemned by the Scriptures. As such, it threatens the
entire Serbian nation with biological extermination." Abortion is legal
and widely performed in Serbia, and the birth-rate has declined
sharply. [International Right to Life Federation newsletter, May 2000]
George W Bush, Republican candidate for the American presidential
elections in November, has said that he would uphold the ban on federal
funding for stem cell research on human embryos. His main rival,
vice-president Al Gore, said that he would attempt to remove the ban
and allow federally funded researchers to use embryonic stem cells
produced by researchers who were privately funded. [Wall Street
Journal, 30 May; from Pro-Life Infonet]
The national ethics committee in France has recommended to the
country's lawmakers that euthanasia, though remaining illegal, should
be tolerated under certain conditions. [International Right to Life
Federation newsletter, May 2000]
An Australian doctor plans to provide euthanasia on a boat anchored in
international waters. Dr Philip Nitschke, who assisted at the deaths of
four people in Australia's Northern Territory during the brief period
when it was legal, is seeking advice on the idea from lawyers following
an initiative by the Women on the Waves Foundation in Holland to offer
abortions offshore. [LifeSite Daily News & Agence France Presse
English, on Pro-Life E-News, both 31 May; and other sources]
Pro-abortion groups in America have expressed concern that Catholic
healthcare chains are expanding rapidly and taking over a growing
number of secular hospitals which then no longer offer abortions or
fertility treatment. Catholic hospitals and healthcare systems now
constitute the largest non-profit provider of healthcare in the USA.
Last year the group calling itself Catholics for a Free Choice
complained that only one in five Catholic hospitals offered [so-called]
emergency contraception in cases of rape. Many have since introduced
it, including those belonging to Catholic Healthcare West, but a survey
carried out last December showed that most Catholic hospitals in New
York still have not. New York senator Eric Schneiderman has introduced
legislation requiring any licensed emergency facility to provide the
[abortifacient] drugs, and he said, "I think this is the most offensive
possible intrusion of religious doctrine into situations of medical
necessity." [Mojo News Wire, 1 June]
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