News, 7 August 2001
Human reproductive cloning is set to begin in November and SPUC sees
this is the inevitable outcome of British legalisation of so-called
therapeutic cloning. Professor Severino Antinori--who has acknowledged
his debt to the UK government--will this week announce his intention to
use cloned embryos to impregnate 200 women including eight from
Britain. SPUC's Paul Tully said: "Human cloning for reproductive
purposes will create a genetic underclass. Although people who are
produced through cloning will be as human as the rest of us, there is
always a risk they will be stigmatised because of the way in which they
came to be." SPUC also pointed out the physical dangers of cloning, as
shown by experiments on animals. [
Sunday Times and
SPUC media release, 5 August]
Morning-after pills may be legalised in Ireland on the recommendation
of the cabinet's abortion sub-committee. As well as debating a
referendum on abortion, the sub-committee has been looking at ways of
reducing unwanted pregnancies. [
Irish Times reported in
Irish Independent, 7 August]
As reported elsewhere, morning-after pills can act in an abortifacient
way by affecting the womb so that the young embryo cannot implant.
Media-coverage continues of concerns about the General Medical
Council's draft guidance on withdrawal of food and fluid. Yesterday's
Daily Telegraph described the warnings from the group of doctors and lawyers [see our
news of the 20th of last month]
that the guidance comes close to endorsing murder. Mr James Bogle, the
pro-life lawyer, is quoted as saying: "If the GMC guidance permits the
withdrawing and withholding of tube fluids to non-dying patients so as
to cause their death then it will have endorsed intentional killing of
the non-dying." Mr Bogle described dehydration as a cruel death which
painkillers could not always assuage. [
Daily Telegraph, 6 August] On Friday we
reported
on SPUC's concerns that the Official Solicitor might have given some
form of approval to the guidance, which is disputed and potentially
controversial.
British taxpayers are implicated in a programme of 20,000
abortions and sterilisations in a part of China where the country's
one-child policy has been flouted. Some terminations in Huaiji county
will be carried out by force and all the procedures must be performed
by the end of this year. Census officials found that the average family
in Huaiji had five children. [
Sunday Telegraph, 5 August]
The Chinese Family Planning Association, which participates in China's
coercive population control programme, is part of the International
Planned Parenthood Federation which receives UK government money.
President Bush has said that he will decide whether federal funding will be provided for embryo research by early next month. [
Zenit, 5 August]
A 60-year-old Japanese woman has given birth to her first child who was produced through
in vitro fertilisation in the USA using a donor's ova. [
Nando Times, 6 August]
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