News, 22 February 2001
A committee of legislators in Kentucky has approved a measure which
would define life as beginning at the moment of conception. The bill,
which was passed by the judiciary committee of the state senate without
dissent, would allow criminal wrongful death charges to proceed in
cases where an unborn child had been killed at any stage of his or her
development. The same committee also approved a measure which would
apply all state laws regarding abortion to the
RU-486 abortion drug. [
AP, from Messenger-Inquirer, 21 February]
The issues of life and abortion have reportedly been given foremost
attention during the Vatican secretary of state's current round of
meetings with Italian political parties. Cardinal Angelo Sodano has
been encouraging Italian politicians to uphold values of central
concern to the Church. [
LifeSite, 21 February]
Figures released yesterday indicated that 27 terminally ill people
ended their lives last year under Oregon's assisted suicide law. This
total is the same as for 1999. In all, 39 prescriptions [under the
terms of the law] were written in 2000, up from 33 the year before. It
has been estimated that since Oregon's Death With Dignity Act came into
force in October 1997, at least 70 people have availed themselves of
its provisions. All those who have taken their lives under the law have
been prescribed a federally controlled substance and opponents of
assisted suicide hope that President Bush will issue an executive order
making it difficult to prescribe such drugs for the purpose of suicide.
[OregonLive.com, 21 February]
A national opinion poll conducted in Canada has found that a
majority of the population opposes reproductive cloning but supports
so-called therapeutic cloning. 62% of respondents in a survey conducted
by PriceWaterhouseCoopers signalled their support for the use of stem
cells taken from human embryos to produce new organs, and 60% supported
research on embryos for the same purpose. This contrasts with a recent
poll conducted in the United States which found that 72% were against
the cloning of humans for any purpose. [
LifeSite and
National Post, 21 February; also see
news digest for 14 February]
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