News, 1 August 2001
The US House of Representatives last night voted by 265 to 162 to adopt
a bill to ban human cloning, with penalties of up to 10 years in prison
and a $1 million fine. The House rejected a measure which would have
allowed cloning for research by 249 to 178. The Senate will next debate
the bill, which is supported by that house's majority leader and
President Bush. [
CNN, 1 August]
SPUC has welcomed the vote. Paul Tully, SPUC general secretary, said:
"In the UK any form of cloning--whether for research or for generating
cloned babies--could now, in theory, be licensed. Congress's vote should
be seen as a clear message for the British government, which is
increasingly isolated in its pro-cloning stance. America's decision
accords with the European Parliament's call last year for the United
Kingdom to reject research on embryos created by cell nuclear transfer.
The stiff penalties which the US bill proposes indicate both the
serious moral nature of the issue and the need to warn off those with
commercial interests in developing cloning."
SPUC has voiced its concerns about draft guidance issued by the
General Medical Council (GMC), which appears to support euthanasia. In
its
response
to a GMC consultation, SPUC points out that the guidance states that
patients can legally appoint a representative who might make
life-and-death decisions if they are incapacitated, yet this is not the
case in England, Wales or Northern Ireland. SPUC's document also points
out that the guidance controversially states that doctors must follow
patients' written instructions refusing treatment if they become
incapacitated. Such directives have not been legislated for and doctors
actually must care for and treat patients rather than hastening their
deaths. A doctor who followed a patient's directive to stop treating
him or her could be colluding in that person's suicide. On the 20th of
last month we
reported
on how a group of doctors and lawyers had protested at being excluded
from a GMC conference about the consultation, as well as warning that
the guidance might be legally flawed. A
letter from the group appeared in yesterday's
Daily Telegraph.
A surrogate mother in England is trying to get her child back after 10
years. The girl was conceived through artificial insemination and the
mother received £6,500. It is claimed that the child is suffering
because of difficulties in the marriage between her father and his
wife. [
The Times, 30 July]
The number of abortions performed in New Zealand has risen by four
percent to just over 16,000 per year. Figures just released for last
year show that 19 women per thousand of childbearing age had abortions,
which is a higher rate than England and Wales. Abortions among
under-16s rose by 13%. [
newsroom, 31 July] On 12 June last year we
reported how New Zealand abortions had risen by 3.1% from 1998 to 1999.
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