News, 11 April 2002
President Bush has called on the US senate to ban research on cloned
humans and SPUC has welcomed the move. John Smeaton, SPUC national
director, said: "The most powerful politician on earth has told the
world that he is on the side of the weakest, most vulnerable human
beings on earth--human embryos. President Bush has rejected the
misleading arguments used to justify experiments on cloned human
embryos. We must now work hard to ensure that politicians around the
world fully understand the overwhelming scientific and ethical
arguments in favour of treating the human embryo with dignity." [
BBC, 10 April, and
SPUC, 11 April]
British scientists who produced the first cloned mammal have applied
for a licence to experiment on embryos. The Roslin Institute,
Edinburgh, have asked the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority
to let them take stem cells from embryos. The institute is also
reported to be considering creating cloned humans. [
BBC, 10 April] UK law permits the creation of cloned humans but forbids their implantation in a woman's womb.
The Pope has told the world assembly on ageing, presently meeting in
Spain, to use moral principles rather than economic ones when deciding
policy on the elderly. A letter from John Paul II describes how human
dignity does not diminish with the passage of time nor with the
deterioration of health. He adds that the elderly should be seen as a
social resource rather than a burden. [
Zenit, 10 April]
The British government has launched a consultation on guidance for
powers which could be used to order euthanasia by omission. The
consultation-process, launched by the lord chancellor's department
(justice ministry), aims to produce leaflets based on the government's
proposals for the treatment of mentally-incapacitated adults, as
contained in its October 1999 document
Making Decisions.
The leaflets are meant to "set ... the scene for new legislation" and
give "guidance [which] will evolve over time, to reflect future changes
in law and policy affecting people who lack capacity." [
Central Office of Information, 10 April]
The department has thanked, among others, the Voluntary Euthanasia
Society (VES) for its assistance in the process, and recommends the VES
as a "source of help on consent for treatment", such as living wills.
Anthony Ozimic, SPUC political spokesman, commented: "This consultation
is a stalking horse for the legalisation of euthanasia. The government
has made clear that it wants to establish the means whereby the removal
of assisted food and fluids from patients who are not dying can be
ordered. This deliberate starvation and dehydration of patients is
euthanasia and the government should stop its deceit of claiming that
it is against euthanasia."
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