News, 21 November 2000
The Catholic University of Rome has announced that it will provide an
ethical stem cell bank from the beginning of next year. Blood taken
from the placenta (an alternative to using - and destroying - human
embryos) will be stored at the bank and provide a future source of stem
cells not only for those whose umbilical cords were used to provide the
blood, but also for those of compatible blood groups. It is hoped that
the stem cells could be used to generate new body tissue. Archbishop
Elio Sgreccia, vice-president of the Pontifical Academy for Life and
director of the Catholic University's bioethics institute, said that
stem cells extracted from umbilical cords constituted an ethical and
also a potentially more effective alternative to the use of embryos. He
observed: "The scientific hypotheses on which the measures promoted by
the English and US governments are based lack the necessary foundation,
both from the ethical as well as the experimental point of view.
Research rewards the use of stem cells extracted from the umbilical
cord and proves that it is not necessary to sacrifice embryos." [Zenit
news agency, 20 November]
An Argentinean archbishop has warned that new legislation to
promote contraception would lead to an increased number of abortions.
Commenting on the so-called National Programme of Sexual Health and
Responsible Procreation, Archbishop Hector Aguer of La Plata said: "A
partial view as the one adopted in the project will hardly achieve its
purpose. On the contrary, it will promote the vulgarisation of
sexuality and increase the number of abortions and of other negative
consequences of the premature and irresponsible exercise of sexual
activity." [
EWTN News, 17 November]
The Massachusetts state law which established buffer zones around
abortion clinics ten days ago, thus hampering the activities of
pro-life demonstrators and counsellors [
see news digest for 10 November],
has been declared unconstitutional by a US district court judge. Judge
Edward F Harrington decided that the law breached the constitutional
right to free speech because "pro-life advocates who firmly believe
that abortion remains a grave moral evil must be given as equal an
opportunity as their opponents to express ... their sincere message of
respect for the sanctity of innocent human life". The state's attorney
general has not yet decided whether to appeal. [
The Boston Globe, 20 November]
A senior Vatican prelate has used the Christmas story to condemn
abortion. Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, prefect of the Congregation
for the Clergy, detailed the early life of Jesus Christ in the womb of
his mother to emphasise that abortion must be condemned even in the
earliest stages of embryonic development. He said: "Two thousand years
ago an egg was miraculously fertilised by God's supernatural action...
God became no less than a human embryo... The Word of God was
absolutely dependent on a human being but it was totally independent
genetically." [
LifeSite News, 20 November]
New research has suggested that unborn children whose mothers do not
have enough to eat in the early stages of pregnancy are more likely to
develop heart problems in later life. The research, published in the
journal
Heart, is based on studies of 700 people born during the Dutch famine in the mid 1940s. [
BBC News online, 20 November]
The septuplets born to Bobbi and Kenny McCaughy in the US celebrated
their third birthday this week. When the multiple pregnancy was
discovered, doctors recommended the selective abortion of some of the
unborn babies in order to give the others a better chance of survival.
However, all seven are now said to be strong and healthy. [Pro-Life
Infonet, 18 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