News, 7 November 2000
The 20-hour operation to separate Siamese twins Jodie and Mary ended
at 5 o'clock this morning in St Mary's hospital, Manchester. The
hospital confirmed that "despite all the efforts of the medical team,
Mary sadly died". Jodie is said to be in a "critical, but stable
condition", though the next 72 hours are critical. [
BBC News online, 7
November]
A report which the Royal Society will present to members of the
British parliament today recommends that research using stem cells
derived from cloned human embryos should be permitted. Dr Richard
Gardener, leading author of the report, said that embryonic stem cells
still provided the most promising means of providing replacement
tissue despite "exciting recent reports" indicating the potential of
adult stem cells. Dr Gardener said that research should be carried out
into both embryonic and adult stem cells, but that, if the former were
outlawed, British scientists might decide to continue their research
abroad. [
BBC News online, 7 November] The British government is
expected to place statutory instruments which would authorise research
into so-called therapeutic cloning before both houses of parliament
very soon, and votes on the proposals have been promised before the
end of the year.
A couple are making legal history in France by seeking compensation
for the birth of their severely handicapped son in 1983. Josette
Perruche caught rubella during her pregnancy, a condition which caused
her unborn child's handicap. Josette and Christian Perruche have
argued that the failure of doctors to diagnose the rubella prevented
Josette from opting for an abortion. Whereas the couple's
representative argued in court that the case simply concerned "the
scope of compensation due because of the medical error", the public
prosecutor warned that a dangerous precedent could be set whereby the
recognition of a right 'not to live' might lead to a systematic
killing of all handicapped unborn children. [
Reuters, Yahoo! News, 3
November]
Pope John Paul II has denounced what he termed "the radical
contradiction" of vigorous affirmations of human rights which do not
extend the right to life to unborn children. Addressing delegates of
the Council of Europe, the Pope said: "It is my fervent hope that the
moment will soon come when it will be equally understood that an
enormous injustice is committed when innocent life in the womb of the
mother is not safeguarded. This radical contradiction is possible only
when freedom is sundered from the truth inherent in the reality of
things, and democracy divorced from transcendent values." [Zenit news
agency, 3 November]
Peter Garrett, director of research and education for the charity
Life, is planning to stand as a candidate in the forthcoming British
parliamentary by-election in Preston, Lancashire. Standing on a
pro-life policy platform for the Preston Alliance, Mr Garrett has been
endorsed by both the Pro-Life Alliance and the Christian People's
Alliance. He recently resigned from the Labour party in protest over
the Labour government's anti-life policies. [
The Tablet, 4 November]
Thailand's council of state has reaffirmed the country's ban on
abortion except in cases of rape, threat to the physical health of the
mother or foetal health problems. The council had been asked to rule
on whether women with HIV or AIDS could abort their unborn children,
but it replied that, since the women would eventually die anyway,
their health could not be taken into account as a criterion for
abortion. The
Bangkok Post claimed that there was "growing pressure
for a change in the law" and reported that Dr Tawee Chotevithayasunon
of the Children's Hospital had called on public interest groups to
lobby for a change in order to prevent unwanted pregnancies and
orphans. [
Bangkok Post, 7 November; also CRLP data]
The Roman Catholic apostolic administrator of Eastern Siberia, Russia,
has announced the launch of an aid programme to persuade pregnant
women not to have abortions. Bishop Jerzy Mazur said that the
principal reasons for Russia's high abortion rates were poverty and
the disintegration of family values following the fall of communism.
He said that the Sisters of St Anne would provide help for Siberian
women who might otherwise decide to abort their babies. [Zenit news
agency, 6 November]
The leader of the Canadian Alliance party has downplayed suggestions
that, if his party were elected, he would seek to hold a referendum on
the issue of abortion. Stockwell Day [who is known to be personally
opposed to abortion] said that he did not think the public wanted the
abortion debate re-opened. [
Montreal Gazette, 6 November]
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