News, 12 September 2001
Pro-life organisations have been among the many groups to express
shock and horror at yesterday's terrorist attacks in the United
States. Jacki Ragan, an official at the National Right to Life
Committee based in Washington DC, said: "All I can think of are the
countless lives lost this morning because of senseless acts of
terrorism." SPUC in London joins with others in condemning these
outrages against the sanctity of human life and expresses its deepest
sympathy for all those who have been injured or bereaved.
The judge considering whether the Northern Ireland health department
should issue guidance on the availability of abortion services is to
consider evidence from the Irish Catholic bishops. He will decide in
four weeks' time whether also to look at evidence from SPUC. The
judicial review is taking place at the request of the Family Planning
Association (FPA). If the review goes the FPA's way, it could lead to
availability of abortion effectively on demand in Northern Ireland.
Mrs Betty Gibson, chairman of SPUC Northern Ireland, said: "We are
pleased that the judge will look at the bishops' evidence and shall be
happy to supply our own if so requested." [
SPUC media release, 12
September]
Britain's largest private provider of abortions has called for an
overhaul of abortion services to meet demand. Ann Furedi, director of
communications at the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS), said
that the government's target of ensuring access to abortion for all
women within three weeks of a legal request by 2005 was unattainable
without breaking "the mould of the way abortions are carried out here".
Ms Furedi continued: "Women want abortions that are convenient to
slot into their lives. They want to be able to come into the clinic
and to be able to be treated and to be able to leave within a couple
of hours." Professor Jack Scarisbrick, chairman of the Life charity,
disagreed and said that women needed time to reflect on what they were
doing. [
BBC News online, 12 September]
Doctors in Cambridge, England, are transplanting foetal brain cells
from aborted unborn children into patients with Huntington's disease.
The Medical Research Council's brain repair unit has been working on
the technique for 15 years, but the new trials are said to be the
first involving adult humans. Six million foetal brain cells were
injected into the brain of the first patient at Addenbrooke's hospital
in an operation lasting several hours. A BBC documentary team is
following the trials. [
BBC News online, 11 September]
A Canadian woman has died after taking the RU-486 abortion drug, also
known as mifepristone or Mifeprex. The woman, who was involved in a
Canadian trial of the drug, is said to have died from septic shock
resulting from a rare clostridium infection, although it is unclear
whether the infection was directly related to the chemical abortion.
The Population Council has suspended the trial and reported the death
to the US Food and Drug Administration. [AP and
Washington Post, 11
September; via Pro-Life E-News]
A Swiss male nurse has confessed to the killings of 27 elderly
patients. Roger Andermatt, aged 32, had originally admitted
responsibility for nine deaths [see
news digest for 6 July 2001] but
has now confessed to 18 further killings. He claims to have drugged
and suffocated the elderly patients out of sympathy and compassion for
their plights. However, the magistrate involved in the case revealed
that Mr Andermatt had also admitted to feeling relieved and "somehow
liberated" after each patient had died. Euthanasia is already
tolerated in a number of Swiss cantons. [
BBC News online, 11
September]
Two British fertility and cloning experts have pulled out of a
conference on cloning because it was to be presided over by Professor
Severino Antinori. Dr Anne McLaren, a member of the UK's Human
Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, and Professor Ian Wilmut of
the Roslin Institute, which cloned Dolly the sheep, made their
decisions to pull out of the symposium in Monte Carlo next month
because Professor Antinori plans to implant cloned humans inside women
for reproductive purposes. Professor Wilmut supports the use of human
embryos created through reproductive cloning technology only in
destructive experimentation. [
Daily Telegraph, 12 September; also see
news digest for 13 April 2000]
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