News, 29 April 2002
The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that there is no right to
assisted suicide under the European Convention on Human Rights. A panel
of seven judges in Strasbourg ruled unanimously this morning that Mrs
Dianne Pretty, who has motor-neurone disease (MND), has no right to be
helped to die by her husband. The coalition of pro-life groups which
had been involved in the case warmly welcomed the judgement. The
coalition had serious concerns that the case could undermine the lives
of vulnerable people and lead to the practice of euthanasia. [
SPUC and
BBC News online, 29 April]
Switzerland's Christian Democrats have overwhelmingly rejected
government plans to legalise abortion. Delegates at a meeting of the
centre-right political party voted by 201 to 73 against the
government's proposals, which will be put to the Swiss people in a
referendum on 2 June. Under a law passed in 1942, abortion is illegal
in Switzerland unless the mother's life is at risk. However, it is
widely tolerated and there are thought to be about 13,000 abortions
performed each year. The government's referendum proposals would
legalise abortion in the first three months of pregnancy, and an
opinion poll has indicated that 64% of voters are minded to support the
plan. [
Swissinfo, 29 April]
Legislators in Germany have given final approval to the importation of
stem cells extracted from human embryos. The lower house of the German
parliament voted on Thursday by 369 to 190 in favour of a law which
upholds a ban on the extraction of stem cells from embryos in Germany
but authorises the importation of embryonic stem cells produced abroad
prior to 1 January 2002. The measure, which was approved in principle
last January, received the support of Gerhard Schroeder, the German
chancellor, but was opposed by President Johannes Rau and Church
leaders. [
AP, via Yahoo! News, 25 April]
Thousands of people participated in pro-life chains organised by SPUC
throughout England, Wales and Scotland on Saturday to mark the 34th
anniversary of the day on which the British Abortion Act came into
effect. Since 27 April 1968, more than five and a half million unborn
children have been aborted under the terms of the Act. Catherine
Butchers, a 26-year-old trainee lawyer, was among the hundreds of
people who took part in the central London chain. She said: "I wanted
to participate in this event to show that I care about the unborn and
because it is so important to bear witness to the fact that every
abortion is an assault against the fundamental dignity of human life.
Legal abortion undermines the very foundation of civilised society."
[SPUC, 29 April]
Professor Ian Wilmut, the co-creator of Dolly the first cloned
sheep, has revealed that every one of the world's cloned animals is
genetically and physically defective. Dr Wilmut conducted a review of
all cloned animals around the world and found that they were beset by a
wide range of anomalies, including excessive size of certain organs,
heart defects, obesity, lung problems and malfunctioning immune
systems. Dolly the sheep has developed arthritis at a far younger age
than expected. Professor Wilmut concluded: "There is abundant evidence
that cloning can and does go wrong and no justification for believing
that this will not happen with humans." [The Times, 29 April]
Dana Rosemary Scallon, the pro-life member of the European
parliament for Ulster and Connaught, has announced her intention to
seek election to Ireland's national parliament. Mrs Scallon officially
launched her campaign over the weekend ahead of the general election on
17 May. At the launch she said that her core message was that life
should be respected at all stages of development. Mrs Scallon, who is
standing in the Galway West constituency, came second in the last Irish
presidential election. [
Irish Independent, 29 April]
Pro-lifers have expressed concern that "reproductive care" is on the
agenda for discussion at the United Nations Special Session on
Children, which is going on in New York this week and next week. Among
the UN's stated aims for the summit is ensuring that "all individuals
of appropriate age, especially women and adolescent girls, have full
access to affordable, quality reproductive care". Wendy Wright,
spokesman for Concerned Women for America, warned that pro-abortionists
had no concern for women's health but were following a political
agenda. [
CNSNews, 29 April]
ACTION: Members of the European parliament will vote definitively on
the European Union's research budget for the next five years on 14 May.
During the first reading of this budget report (known as the Caudron
report), MEPs backed funding for research which involves the use of
so-called supernumerary in vitro fertilisation embryos and existing
embryonic stem cell stocks. Ahead of the definitive vote, if you are a
citizen of an EU member country we ask you to sign a "declaration on
human genetics and other new technologies in medicine" on the Euro-Fam
website. It can be viewed and signed
here.
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