News, 15 November 2000
The Catholic bishops of England and Wales have issued a statement to
express their great concern at proposals to authorise the cloning of
human embryos for research purposes. The bishops stressed that such
research was immoral "because it involves the deliberate creation and
destruction of new human lives for the sole purpose of extracting stem
cells for research. It strips an individual human life, in its
earliest form, of all dignity, reducing it to no more than a
commodity, a supply of disposable organic matter". The bishops also
insisted that it was unnecessary, citing the potential of other
avenues of stem cell research, and urged all Catholics to write to
their member of parliament on the issue. John Smeaton, national
director of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children,
commented: "We welcome the leadership being provided by the Catholic
Church with regard to the British government's backing for destructive
experiments on cloned human embryos." [
Statement from the Catholic
Media Office, 15 November; SPUC comment]
A study into teenage pregnancies in Doncaster, England, has suggested
that many girls in deprived areas refuse to have abortions on account
of the social stigma attached. The report, which was carried out on
behalf of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, claimed that peer group
pressure, family pressures and lack of information meant that girls
continued with unplanned pregnancies. The report's authors used their
findings to argue that better information on abortion should be made
available to young women, and the National Abortion Campaign
emphasised this point. Paul Tully, general secretary of the Society
for the Protection of Unborn Children, described the report as "biased
and outdated" and observed that it should be seen as "part of a wider
pro-abortion agenda which is being pushed subtly yet unremittingly by
government." [
BBC News online,
The Times,
The Guardian and
SPUC media
release, 15 November]
A European Union ethics panel has said that research into so-called
therapeutic cloning of human embryos is premature. In a report
presented to French President Jacques Chirac, who currently holds the
presidency of the EU Council of Ministers, the European Group of
Ethics in Science and New Technologies recommended that alternatives
to the use of cloned embryos for stem cell research should take
priority. The report stated: "There is a wide field of research to be
carried out with alternative sources of human cells: from spare [
sic]
embryos, foetal tissues and adult stem cells." [
AFP, 14 November; via
Yahoo! News] If the British parliament votes to authorise so-called
therapeutic research on human embryos, which would entail the cloning
of embryos for stem cell extraction, the UK would become the first
country to authorise and finance such practices.
It has been reported that some fertility experts in the UK are
concerned that authorisation of research into so-called therapeutic
cloning could lead to a shortage of donated eggs for fertility
treatment. Dr Tony Rutherford of Leeds General Infirmary pointed out
that demand for donated eggs has risen by 20 to 25 percent
year-on-year for the last three to four years, and warned: "They are
going to need healthy volunteers just as we need healthy volunteers."
[
BBC News online, 14 November]
A British couple will today take a fertility clinic to court for
breach of contract because they were given triplets instead of twins.
Peter and Patricia Thompson claim that they only agreed to the
implantation of two embryos, and were shocked to learn that three
embryos generated through
in vitro fertilisation had been implanted.
Mrs Thompson refused to have one of her unborn children aborted and
gave birth to three healthy babies, but now believes that she should
be compensated for the extra expense. [
Guardian Unlimited, 15
November]
Figures released by the Office for National Statistics in Britain have
indicated that nearly one in nine Irish pregnancies are being
terminated in British abortion clinics. In the first three months of
this year, 1,667 women with Irish addresses had abortions in Britain,
compared with 13,894 births in Ireland over the same period. The
number of abortions represents 12 percent of the number of births, or
10.7 percent of recorded pregnancies (
i.e. births and abortions taken
together). [
Ireland on Sunday, 12 November]
It has been reported that the RU-486 abortion drug will be made
available to abortion practitioners this week, under the tradename of
Mifeprex. The price of the drug has been set by Danco Laboratories at
270 dollars, although this does not include the cost of misoprostol
(which must be taken in conjunction with RU-486) or the charges levied
by abortionists and counsellors. [
LifeSite Daily News, 14 November]
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