News, 10 October 2000
The British government has announced plans to promote virginity among
adolescents as part of its programme to reduce teenage pregnancies.
The two million pound advertising campaign will include slogans such
as "Sex - are you thinking about it enough?" John Smeaton, national
director of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, dubbed
the policy as "a wolf in sheep's clothing". He said: "Of course, the
promotion of abstinence among younger teenagers is in itself a good
thing, because evidence indicates that it is an effective way of
preventing teenage pregnancies and reducing the number of abortions."
However, he went on to observe that "the promotion of virginity only
constitutes a front for a more sinister initiative" which entails
spending 60 million pounds on measures including promotion of the
morning-after pill and increasing access to abortion. [
SPUC media
release, 10 October]
The Australian genetics company which had reportedly mixed human and
pig cells using the nuclear cell replacement technique [see
yesterday's digest] has announced that it will withdraw its European application
to patent the technology and amend those patents pending in the United
States. The patents had been submitted jointly by Stem Cell Sciences
of Australia and Biotransplant of the United States. Peter Mountford,
chief executive officer of Stem Cell Sciences, acknowledged concerns
that the patents did not exclude the possibility of human reproductive
cloning, and agreed that the embryo created using a pig's ovum and
human DNA could "in the extreme theoretical sense" have been
successfully implanted inside a woman and developed into a human baby.
He insisted that his company had only ever intended to use the
technology to clone animals. [Zenit news agency, 9 October]
A senior transplant surgeon in the UK has said that the law should be
changed to allow brain dead patients to be kept alive using artificial
respiration for the purpose of organ donation. Jetmund Engeset, of
Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, said: "People are incredibly selfish and
should think about their fellow human beings." [
The Times, 9 October]
The Japanese cabinet has proposed new, more vigorous sanctions against
reproductive human cloning. Responding to criticism earlier this year
that its proposed measures against the implantation of human clones
inside women were too lenient, the cabinet has approved a bill which
would impose prison sentences of up to 10 years and fines of up to 10
million yen on offenders. The sanctions only apply to so-called
reproductive cloning, while separate guidelines allowing research into
embryos cloned in the test-tube will now be drawn up. [Reuters, 6
October]
The head of statistics at Russia's academy of sciences has warned that
her country's birth rate has fallen to critical levels. Noting that
abortion still remained the primary form of birth control in Russia,
Olga Frolova observed that the birth-rate has fallen to 1.3 children
per woman of childbearing age and said, "We are facing a serious
decrease of the population rate." There are more than two million
abortions carried out every year in Russia, while only 1.2 million
children are born. The total population is expected to drop by 700,000
in 2001. [AFP, 5 October; from Pro-Life E-News]
The Catholic bishops of Germany have affirmed their commitment to
expanding the services offered to pregnant women by Catholic consultation
centres, after the centres stopped the practice of issuing women with
legal certificates used to obtain abortions. The centres had to issue
the certificates in order to receive state funding, but last year Pope
John Paul II said that the centres should not participate in the
scheme. Bishop Karl Lehmann of Mainz, presenting the conclusions of a
bishops' conference meeting, said that the centres would provide new
services to women in crisis pregnancies such as financial help and
assistance in finding a home. They would also launch an advertising
campaign to let women know about the services. [EWTN News, 6 October]
The issue of abortion was raised in the public debate last week
between Dick Cheney and Joe Lieberman, the Republican and Democrat
vice-presidential candidates in next month's election. Mr Cheney
reaffirmed his wish to see the number of abortions reduced and
adoption promoted as an alternative, whereas Senator Lieberman stated
his support for the RU-486 abortion pill and "a woman's right to
choose" abortion. [Pro-Life Infonet, 6 October]
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