News, 2 November 2001
An English high court judge yesterday deferred judgement in the
judicial review being brought by the ProLife Alliance regarding the UK
parliament's vote to authorise so-called therapeutic cloning. A
spokesperson for the ProLife Alliance said: "We are genuinely
optimistic. We feel the judge absorbed our arguments very quickly."
The judgement is expected to be given next week. [
Reuters, via
ABCNews, 1 November]
The full hearing of SPUC's legal challenge to sales of the
abortifacient morning-after pill from British pharmacists has now been
postponed until 12 February next year. [SPUC, 2 November]
The US government has warned that doxycycline, an antibiotic being
prescribed to people who may have been exposed to anthrax, can harm
unborn children. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
advised doctors to prescribe Cipro to pregnant women instead, despite
fears that Cipro is being overprescribed in the general population
causing common bacteria to become resistant to it. The CDC said that
no formal studies had confirmed the safety of Cipro to unborn
children, but that it was unlikely to pose any substantial risk.
[
Boston Herald, 1 November]
A prominent Canadian pro-abortionist has conceded that abortions are
not medically necessary procedures. In a submission to the finance
committee of the Canadian House of Commons, Marilyn Wilson, executive
director of the Canadian Abortion Rights Action League (CARAL), said
that women sought abortions "for socio-economic reasons". Mr Jason
Kenney, a member of the finance committee, said that her admission was
very significant because CARAL had always claimed that abortions were
medically necessary and should therefore be financed by provincial
governments. [
LifeSite, 1 November; also see news digests for
1 June
2000 and
12 January 2001]
The US senate has dropped an amendment on human embryo research from
an appropriations bill after President Bush said that he would veto
the legislation if it remained [see
yesterday's digest]. Pro-life
senators had proposed other amendments intended to nullify Senator
Arlen Specter's attempt to give a right to the president to ignore a
clause which protected human embryos. However, discussion of these
amendments would have delayed other spending bills and anti-terrorist
legislation, so Senator Specter agreed to withdraw his amendment until
the issues of stem cell research and human cloning could be debated in
greater depth. [AP and National Review, 1 November; via
Pro-Life
Infonet]
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