News, 31 October 2000
Cardinal Thomas Winning, archbishop of Glasgow, has written to every
Scottish member of the British House of Commons on the subject of
human cloning, ahead of today's vote on a bill which would legalise
so-called therapeutic cloning. The cardinal wrote: "I would ask you to
consider for a moment, in the quiet of your own conscience, whether it
can be right to allow cloning to go ahead, albeit 'therapeutic'
cloning, when the simple truth is that therapeutic cloning ultimately
means killing those embryos which are 'raided' for their cells. This
procedure exploits human beings at the most vulnerable stage of their
lives." [Zenit news agency, 30 October]
The Born Alive Infants Protection Act, which was passed by the US
House of Representatives last month by a massive majority, failed to
pass the Senate before members of Congress adjourned over the weekend.
The measure would have given legal protection to babies born alive
after botched abortions. Senate majority leader Trent Lott had
attempted to have the bill passed by unanimous consent, but Democratic
senators objected. [
National Review, 27 October; from Pro-Life
Infonet]
Archbishop Edward M Egan of New York has urged the 2.4 million
Catholics in his diocese to vote for candidates who "share our
commitment to fundamental rights for the unborn" in next week's
elections. His letter, which was read out over the weekend in 413
parishes, did not mention any candidates or political parties by name.
[Zenit news agency, 30 October]
The US House of Representatives has again approved the Pain Relief
Promotion Act, this time by 237 votes to 174. The measure would ban
the use of federally controlled substances in assisted suicides [but
at the same time assist the provision of adequate pain relief to the
terminally ill]. The legislation was originally passed by the House in
October 1999, but this time was attached to a bill concerned with tax
reform in an attempt to get it through the Senate. However, President
Clinton has threatened to veto the whole act. [AP and Reuters, 26
October; from pro-Life Infonet]
Cardinal Francis George, archbishop of Chicago, denounced the RU-486
abortion drug on Sunday. He said: "It's a pill that brings death.
That's strange medicine." The drug is expected to be made available in
Chicago before the end of November. [
Chicago Sun-Times, 30 October]
The Reuters news agency has revealed that large gold characters on the
gates of the factory in Shanghai where supplies of the RU-486 abortion
drug are being manufactured for the American market spell out the
message "Make widely known the value of life". The writer of the
Reuters report observes: "The workers who stream past it each day seem
unaware of the irony, and ignorant of the fact that their factory has
plunged into the centre of the long-contested debate in the United
States over the ethics of abortion." [
Reuters, 29 October; from Fox
News]
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