News, 3 October 2001
SPUC has reacted with shock and deep concern at the news that the
Irish government plans to liberalise abortion law by removing legal
protection for the youngest human embryos. Bertie Ahern, the Irish
prime minister, yesterday unveiled the text of a bill which would pave
the way for a referendum to amend the republic's constitution. Mr John
Smeaton, national director of SPUC, was deeply concerned at the fact
that the bill defined abortion as the destruction of human life only
"after implantation", a definition which will lead to the
legitimisation of various forms of killing pre-implantation embryos
such as the morning-after pill and IUD. He pointed out that the bill's
definition of abortion was completely at odds with scientific
evidence, definitions in the world's most respected scientific and
medical dictionaries, and the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church
(Ireland's predominant faith). Mr Smeaton insisted: "Compromise on
this issue in the hope of achieving public support for the protection
of human life is both illusory and misplaced." Mr Smeaton has written
to all the Irish Catholic bishops and many other pro-life contacts in
Ireland, the UK and throughout the world, urging action to protect
human life in Ireland. [SPUC, 3 October]
Every pregnant white woman in the United States is to be offered a
test for the gene mutation that causes cystic fibrosis under new
guidelines issued by the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists. The test will also be offered to every couple who are
considering having a baby if at least one of the partners is white.
One in every 29 white Americans carries the gene for cystic fibrosis.
If both the man and woman in a relationship test positive for the
mutation before conceiving a child, they can be offered
in vitro
fertilisation and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis to screen out and
kill those embryos affected. If the woman is already pregnant, the
child can be aborted. [AP, 1 October; via Northern Light]
Last year the British government contributed 13,000 US dollars
specifically for the provision of abortifacient drugs in Africa. In
its financial statements for 2000, the International Planned
Parenthood Federation records the contribution for "emergency
contraception [in the] Africa region". [
IPPF Financial Statements
2000, p.35]
Statistics released by the South African department of health have
indicated that 40% of abortions in the country are
performed in Gauteng province. Since abortion was legalised five years
ago, 188,061 unborn babies have been killed under the terms of the
law. 76,000 of these have been aborted in Gauteng. The next highest
number was in Free State, where 18,620 unborn babies were aborted.
[
The Sowetan, etc. via Northern Light, 2 October]
A team of American scientists have produced a mouse which has been
genetically modified to grow large numbers of new blood capillaries in
its skin. The researchers at the University of California in San
Francisco claim that the technique could enable doctors to grow new
blood vessels in heart patients and diabetics. The development could
provide another ethical alternative to the use of embryonic stem cells
and so-called therapeutic cloning to produce new body tissue. [BBC
News online, 30 September]
Researchers in the United States have discovered that the children of
soldiers who fought in the 1990-91 Gulf war are more than twice as
likely than other babies to be born with psychological and physical
disabilities. The research, which was sponsored by the Environmental
Epidemiology Service and the Department of Veterans' Affairs, surveyed
30,000 parents in the US armed forces. There have been claims that the
children of British Gulf war veterans have also been more likely to
suffer from developmental anomalies, including Down's syndrome,
allegedly as a result of the drugs given to soldiers in the Gulf. The
reports do not mention if any unborn babies have been aborted on the
basis of developmental anomalies possibly linked to the conflict. [BBC News online, 3 October]
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