News, 14 November 2000
Canadian researchers have demonstrated that adult stem cells could be
used to build up damaged heart tissue. Scientists at the McGill
University Health Centre in Montreal isolated stem cells from the bone
marrow of adult rats and injected these cells back into the rats'
hearts. The stem cells successfully converted into functioning new
heart muscle in 20 of the 22 rats used. Heart muscle cells cannot
replace themselves, and so are not re-grown once they die. The
Canadian team believes that cardiac injections of adult stem cells
could offer an alternative to open heart surgery and transplants in
humans. [
Daily Mail, 13 November] This research provides further
evidence of the potential of using adult stem cells as an ethical
alternative to embryonic stem cells and so-called therapeutic cloning.
Pro-life groups in Scotland have criticised Susan Deacon, the country's
pro-abortion health minister, for her latest strategy aimed at
reducing unwanted teenage pregnancies. Yesterday she launched the
Healthy Respect project, which she says will provide youngsters with
more information about sex and also "careful, targeted contraception".
The project will run initially in the Lothian area, and cost the
Scottish Executive three million pounds. Four new Brook Advisory
clinics will be opened [these clinics offer abortion advice and
referrals] and free literature will be provided by the Family Planning
Association. [
Daily Record, 14 November] Ian Murray, director of SPUC
Scotland, pointed out: "Abortifacient drugs will be promoted alongside
other forms of birth control, and young women will be denied accurate
information about the health dangers associated with sexual activity,
contraceptive use and abortion. Yet again, the health of Scotland's
young people is taking second place to presentation and government
spin."
The assistant director of the Roslin Institute, which cloned Dolly the
sheep, has called for stem cell research on human embryos, including
so-called therapeutic cloning, to be allowed. Dr Harry Griffin said
that a vote in parliament against the practice "would be chronically
disabling for us in the area which we consider to be the most exciting
of all our programmes." He said that a 10- to 20-year research
programme had been envisaged and that British scientists had a lot to
offer in this field. [
The Herald, 11 November]
The Vatican's representative in India has called on all Christians in
Asia to oppose abortion. Archbishop Lorenzo Baldisseri, the apostolic
nuncio, told a meeting of pro-life representatives from across Asia in
Mumbai, India, that abortion was "part of the sinister culture of
death" and that children needed to be seen as a blessing because "each
child that is born bears the message that God hasn't lost hope in
humanity". Cardinal Simon Pimenta, archbishop emeritus of Bombay, told
the same conference that abortion was a tragedy of modern society. The
cardinal also condemned "euphemisms that lead to the destruction of
the gift of life". [
EWTN News, 13 November]
The report of the All-Party Committee on the Constitution, which has
been looking into the issue of abortion in the Irish Republic, will be
published tomorrow. The
Irish Independent newspaper has suggested that
"the prospect of an abortion referendum taking place in the current
Government's lifetime is now regarded as a non-starter". [
Irish
Independent, 14 November]
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