News, 24 September 2001
The supreme court of Alaska has ruled unanimously that there is no
constitutional right to assisted suicide. In upholding a state law
which equates the act of assisting suicide with manslaughter, the
court stated last Friday that the right of the vulnerable to be free
from deadly coercion outweighed the demands of some terminally ill
people to have help in dying. The state of Alaska, several medical
organisations and the Catholic Church had intervened in the case to
oppose assisted suicide. [
Anchorage Daily News, 22 September]
Exit polls have indicated that yesterday's general election in Poland
was won, as expected, by the Democratic Left Alliance (DLA). In a
letter read out in every parish church one week before the election,
the Polish Catholic bishops had warned: "A Catholic society cannot
support a political group that has stated directly its intent to
introduce laws taking aim against the basic right to life." The DLA
has indicated its intention to repeal the 1997 law which restricts
legal abortion in Poland to cases of rape, incest, foetal abnormality
and danger to the life of the mother. [
BBC News online, 24 September;
LifeSite, 21 September]
A conference in England will hear today how doctors have succeeded in
treating injured knees by removing healthy cells from the area,
growing them in the laboratory and then reimplanting them at the site
of the damage. Professor George Bentley of the Royal National
Orthopaedic Hospital in Stanmore, Middlesex, will explain that when
healthy cartilage cells are cultured in the patient's own blood serum,
the number of cells can multiply ten-fold. The innovation provides yet
more evidence of the potential of ethical alternatives to embryonic
stem cell technology and so-called therapeutic cloning for the
production of new body tissue. [
BBC News online, 23 September]
A British national newspaper has highlighted the case of Ji Huansheng,
a four-month-old girl who has survived despite all the efforts of
Chinese population controllers to kill her.
The Independent reports:
"They tried to abort her, but she survived. They took her from her
parents and left her to die, unclothed and unfed. But Ji did not die,
and continues to trouble the authorities who ordered her death." Ji,
whose mother had already exhausted her legal quota of babies, was
saved by nurses and journalists after surviving an attempted abortion
at 35 weeks' gestation and being left in a dying room. The Independent
describes China's population control policy as "a sorry catalogue of
forced abortions and infanticides". [
Independent, 24 September]
The Minnesota Medical Association is split over whether doctors should
be required to dispense abortifacient drugs to rape victims. The
association's convention ended on Friday without agreement on two
motions which would have declared access to so-called emergency
contraception as the standard of care for sexual assault victims and
called for a change in the law to oblige doctors either to provide the
morning-after pill or to refer patients to another doctor who would
provide it. Dr David Strobel, a member of the association, said that
he considered embryos as patients and stated: "If this passes, I would
resign my membership. If it is put into law, I would disobey it."
[
Star Tribune, 22 September]
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