News, 9 March 2001
An Italian fertility specialist has announced plans to conduct
reproductive human cloning within two years. Professor Severino
Antinori told a news conference in Rome today that he had received an
invitation from an unnamed Mediterranean country [SPUC sources suggest
that this country may be Turkish Cyprus] to establish a human cloning
clinic, and that he already had a long list of applicant couples. SPUC
reacted with concern and sadness at the news, and blamed British prime
minister Tony Blair's government for the development. Mr John Smeaton,
national director of SPUC, said: "When the British parliament voted to
authorise research into so-called therapeutic cloning, it did so in
blatant contravention of international consensus. Despite the
assurances of ministers that the research would not lead to
reproductive cloning, Professor Antinori has thanked Tony Blair for
making it possible to go ahead with his plans." Mr Smeaton continued:
"All human cloning is a blatant denial of human dignity. It is to the
great shame of our country's leaders that Britain has taken the lead
in this repugnant technology." [
BBC News online and
SPUC media
release, 9 March]
A Vatican missionary agency has claimed that China's one-child
population control policy has resulted in the illegal trafficking of
women. Fides claimed that the high rate of sex-selective abortion of
female unborn children meant that there were 70 million unmarried men
in China aged between 25 and 49. Documents released by the Chinese
Communist party indicated that more than 19,000 cases of women being
sold against their will were discovered in 1990, while more than
60,000 people were arrested after being implicated in the trade.
[
Zenit news agency, 8 March]
A coalition of Christian groups and individuals in the United States
is mounting a legal challenge to the guidelines issued by President
Clinton's administration which allow federal funding of embryonic stem
cell research. The Bush administration is currently reviewing these
guidelines. The suit, brought in the District of Columbia by the
Christian Medical Association and others, argues that the guidelines
illegally violate a congressional ban on research using human embryos.
Senator Sam Brownback, who is supporting the action, said: "It has
never been acceptable to kill one person for the benefit of another.
Yet this is precisely what was proposed by the NIH [National
Institutes of Health] when they formalised their guidelines governing
destructive human research last year." [
Reuters, from Yahoo! News, 8
March]
The only independent abortion clinic in the Australian state of
Tasmania has closed after an eight-year campaign by pro-lifers.
Ecumenical prayer meetings had been held in churches near the Women's
Health Foundation clinic every Thursday since August 1992. About 10
abortions were performed each week in the clinic, which announced that
it was closing due to a drop in custom. [
The Mercury, 9 March]
Kentucky's state senate has passed a measure which defines human life
as beginning at the moment an egg is fertilised by a sperm. If the
measure becomes law, murderers of pregnant women could be charged on
two counts of homicide. Pro-abortionists have objected to the measure,
claiming that a natural progression would be to include abortion under
homicide laws. [
AP, via The Cincinnati Enquirer, 9 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