News, 16 April 2002
The people of Switzerland will vote in a referendum on whether to
legalise abortion on 2 June. While abortion officially remains illegal,
it is already tolerated and there are thought to be between 12,000 and
13,000 abortions carried out each year. If the referendum proposal is
passed, abortion would be legalised in the first trimester of
pregnancy, but the plan faces strong opposition from a number of
political parties and religious groups. 119 political and Church
representatives have issued a joint statement opposing abortion and
affirming that human life begins at conception. [
NZZ online, 16 April]
Scientists in China have called for national legislation to permit
human cloning for research purposes and ban the implantation of clones
in women. 20 biologists, doctors and philosophers in Shanghai have
urged the city's government to establish an ethics committee to monitor
embryonic stem cell research after claims were made that Chinese
Professor Lu Guangxiu had successfully created more than 100 human
clones for destructive research. The calls were supported by Chinese
participants at the Human Genome Organisation's international
conference last weekend. [
The Guardian, 16 April]
The former chairwoman of the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority has said that fertility clinics should be made to pay
financial penalties when twins and triplets are born as a result of in
vitro fertilisation treatment. Professor Ruth Deech said that the
penalties were necessary to limit the number of multiple births which
were burdening the National Health Service. There were 285 sets of
triplets born in the UK in 2000. In the same year there were 37 cases
of so-called selective reduction, whereby one or more unborn babies in
a multiple pregnancy were selectively aborted to reduce the number who
would be born. [
BBC News online, 13 April;
Office for National Statistics, abortion statistics 2000]
Pope John Paul II has warned that the pursuit of profit in the
pharmaceutical industry is leading to unethical medicine. In a letter
addressed to the apostolic nuncio in Poland and released by the Vatican
last Thursday, the Pope wrote: "The pharmaceutical industry has
favoured research which has already placed on the world market products
contrary to the moral good, including products which are not respectful
of procreation and even suppress human life already conceived." By way
of example, the Pope observed that destructive embryonic stem cell
research had received heavy investment while "acceptable and
scientifically valid programmes using adult stem cells for the same
therapies, with no less success, draw little support because lower
profits are anticipated". [
EWTN News, 12 April]
A representative of the Anglican church in The Gambia has told a
meeting on population and development in the capital Banjul that
abortion contravenes the teachings of Christianity as a religion which
recognises the sanctity of human life. Rev Sam K Anumihe was speaking
on behalf of the Anglican bishop of The Gambia at an
inter-denominational meeting aimed at formulating a common Christian
position on population and development issues. [
AllAfrica.com, 15 April; via Northern Light]
Dr Jack Kevorkian, a prominent campaigner for euthanasia in the United
States who is serving 10 to 25 years in prison for a so-called mercy
killing that was filmed and broadcast on national television, has had
his request for a new trial rejected by the supreme court of Michigan.
Dr Kevorkian claims that his conviction was unconstitutional, but the
court rejected his arguments on a 6-1 decision. Dr Kevorkian's lawyers
now hope to take the case to the US Supreme Court. [
CBS News, 11 April]
Byron R White, one of the two US Supreme Court justices who dissented
from the 1973 Roe v Wade and Doe v Bolton judgements which declared a
constitutional right to abortion, has died aged 84. In his dissenting
opinion attached to the Doe v Bolton judgement, Justice White wrote:
"In a sensitive area such as this, involving as it does issues over
which reasonable men may easily and heatedly differ, I cannot accept
the Court's exercise of its clear power of choice by interposing a
constitutional barrier to state efforts to protect human life and by
investing mothers and doctors with the constitutionally protected right
to exterminate it." [
AP, 15 April;
text of US Supreme Court judgement, 1973]
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