News, 17 May 2000
The Scotland on Sunday newspaper has reported that Dr Liam Donaldson's
report on human cloning was delivered last week to British ministers.
All the signs are that the report will recommend so-called therapeutic
cloning, and the newspaper quotes a source inside the Department of
Health as saying, "The important thing is that people don't get stuck
on the word 'cloning' with its rather strange connotations and
recognise that this is incredibly important science." The source added
that any final decision would take some time. [Scotland on Sunday, 15
May] Paul Tully, General Secretary of the Society for the Protection of
Unborn Children, said : "This is clearly a planned leak on the part of
the British government to soften the impact when the Donaldson
committee report is eventually published and so-called therapeutic
cloning is given the go-ahead."
The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children and other pro-life
groups in Britain are launching a nationwide petition calling on the
government to outlaw all human cloning. In a press release, John
Smeaton, national director of SPUC, condemned both so-called
therapeutic cloning and reproductive cloning, and mentioned the
possibility of ethical alternatives. Petition forms for UK residents
are available by telephoning (020) 7222 5845. [SPUC media release, 16th
May]
More than three quarters of family doctors in England believe that
elderly patients suffer discrimination in hospital. The survey by
pressure group Age Concern also indicated that half of family doctors
would worry if an elderly member of their family were admitted to
hospital. [The Times & Daily Telegraph, 17 May]
The Prince of Wales will tonight launch an attack on new technology
such as cloning and genetically modified food, warning of "potentially
disastrous consequences". The platform for his comments will be this
year's last Reith Lecture. [Metro, 17 May]
The lecture will be broadcast in the UK this Friday on Radio 4 at 8 pm.
As Pope John Paul II prepares to celebrate his 80th birthday tomorrow,
members of Youth for Life in the USA are planning to mark his 81st
'firstday'. The group will present him with a 'firstday' card in Rome
on August 18th to make the point that a person's life should be
celebrated from its very beginning, nine months before birth. [Zenith
News Agency, 16 May]
Mrs Ann Winterton's early day motion in the British House of Commons
criticising moves towards euthanasia, mentioned in previous news
digests, has now received the signatures of 41 MPs in total. The motion
is entitled "Prevention of Euthanasia by Omission". [Notices of
Motions, House of Commons, 15 May]
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