News, 4 October 2000
The story covered in yesterday's digest of Adam Nash, the American
baby who was conceived and selected using
in vitro fertilisation
techniques to be a bone marrow donor for his sister, has received
considerable coverage in today's national press in Britain. The story
provided the main headline in this morning's
Times and
Daily Mail
newspapers, as well as in yesterday's London
Evening Standard. The
press reported that baby Adam was one of 15 test-tube babies created
in the fourth treatment cycle carried out. A commentary written in the
Daily Mail by Anthony O'Hear, professor of philosophy at Bradford
University, included the following thoughts: "If the sacredness of
life means anything at all, it must mean that, even in the early
stages, it is not treated as a resource to be farmed and used for some
ulterior purpose, however good. From both philosophy and religion we
learn that we are not to use other human beings, however immature, as
a means to other ends. This belief is the basis of all civilised life
and behaviour." [
Daily Mail, 4 October,
etc.]
Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, president of the Pontifical Council
for the Family, has stressed that Catholic politicians must act
consistently with their faith and respect life. He observed:
"Everything collapses without respect for life. Politicians must have
the defence of the right [to] life in their own heart and mind to
offer it to the community. Without this defence, instead of
contributing to the construction of society, the politician destroys
it." The cardinal also said that the crime of abortion consitutes "a
severe, prolonged winter" in terms of the world's treatment of
children. [Zenit news agency, 3 October]
The department of health in the US state of Minnesota has released its
first detailed report on abortions in accordance with a state law
passed in 1998. The report revealed that there were 14,342 abortions
in the state during 1999, performed by a total of 78 doctors. The
information included statistics that 92 percent of abortions were
carried out in the first trimester, that most women were unmarried,
that more than 4,000 of the women had been using contraception, and
that less than one percent of the women cited rape or incest as the
reason for their abortion. 20 of the aborted children were buried
afterwards. The report also revealed that seven doctors in Minnesota
performed more than 1,000 abortions each last year, and that a quarter
of abortions were performed by general or family-practice doctors.
[
Star Tribune, 3 October; from Pro-Life E-News]
An unborn baby who was cut out from the womb by his mother's murderer
has survived and is said to be in a good condition. Police in Ohio,
USA, found the young boy alive at the killer's home. Theresa Andrews,
the child's 23-year-old mother, was found in a shallow grave.
Investigators suspect that Michelle Bica, the killer, had intended to
steal the baby and pretend it was her own, but after the murder she
shot herself. [
The Sun, 4 October]
The Catholic bishop of London, Ontario, has condemned the Toronto
organising committee of the World March for Women after his comments
were used in publicity material to suggest that he supported all the
goals of the march, including access to abortion. The bishop said that
this was "completely false" and insisted that, despite his support for
the other stated goals of the march, a rejection of abortion "is the
only stance that can be reconciled with the equal dignity of all women". [EWTN News, 29 September]
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