News, 10 April 2001
The leader of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales has urged
lawyers to use human rights legislation to protect unborn children
from the moment of conception. Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor,
archbishop of Westminster, made his appeal in Counsel, the official
barristers' magazine. He wrote that there had been a "grave erosion of
the right to life through laws on abortion and embryo research" and
called on lawyers to use the Human Rights Act and the European Charter
of Fundamental Rights to build up a genuine human rights culture
through case law which recognised the rights of the unborn.
[
Independent, 9 April] The Human Rights Act 1998 incorporated certain
aspects of the European Convention on Human Rights into UK national
law last October, including the right to life.
Reports in the British media have highlighted the potential of human
fat tissue as a source of stem cells which could be converted into
other types of tissue. A research team led by Marc Hendrick of the
University of California at Los Angeles has succeeded in converting
fat tissue into muscle, bone and cartilage. Adult stem cells provide a
promising and ethical alternative to the destructive use of human
embryos and so-called therapeutic cloning. Adam Katz, another member
of Dr Hendrick's research team, said that he believed that the
potential of fat tissue could make the use of foetal stem cells
obsolete. [
The Times and
Independent, 10 April] It has been
reported in this news digest that stem cells from fat tissue could be
converted into bone cells [
19 October 2000] and cartilage [
28 February
2001].
The upper house of the Dutch parliament is expected to vote in favour
of legalising euthanasia later today. A clear majority of the Dutch
people are said to support the legislation, which contains a number of
conditions such as that the patient should be experiencing "unbearable
suffering". However, pro-life campaigners have objected to the
legalisation of deliberate killing, and Yvonne Timmerman of the
Christian Democrats has argued that the provision of adequate
palliative care should be the priority. Britain's Independent
newspaper has praised the Dutch measure and called for similar
legislation to be passed in the UK. [
BBC news online and
Independent,
10 April]
The leader of the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico has condemned the
abortifacient morning-after pill, insisting that it should not be
referred to as a contraceptive because it can kill early human life.
Addressing a youth congress in Mexico City, Cardinal Norberto Rivera
Carrera said: "We must make all medical and pharmaceutical
professionals aware, so that they will be witnesses to the value of
human life and defend the weakest and defenceless, which is the case
with the human embryo- an innocent victim of a culture and policy
unable adequately to support the dignity of the person." [
Zenit, 8
April]
The pro-abortion mayor of New York City has said that the availability
of abortion is more consistent with his own Republican party's
philosophical underpinnings than the pro-life position. This is
despite the fact that his party's national policy platform contains a
call for a constitutional amendment to ban all abortions. Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani said that Republicans stood for increased individual
freedom, including freedom to choose abortion. [
Cybercast News
Service, 9 April]
Priests for Life, an American pro-life organisation, is offering a
reward of 50,000 dollars to anyone who provides the authorities with
information leading to the capture of fugitives wanted for shootings
at abortion clinics. Fr Frank Pavone, the organisation's director,
described those who shot abortionists as "pro-choice" because they
thought that it was sometimes acceptable to take a life to solve a
problem [thus equating them with the abortionists themselves]. "We
reject that philosophy," he said. Fr Pavone also unveiled a nationwide
advertising initiative offering Church support to women who were
hurting after having abortions. [
Staten Island Live, 30 March]
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