News, 8 August 2002
Marie Stopes International (MSI), a worldwide provider and promoter of
abortion, is opening clinics in Afghanistan. The main MSI clinic will
be located in a busy part of the capital Kabul and will provide
so-called reproductive healthcare, counselling and education, as well
as training for other reproductive healthcare providers. In addition,
MSI will work in conjunction with the United Nations to open 15 other
mini-clinics around the city which will refer women to the main clinic
for "specialist services". [Discovery Health News, 8 August] If the MSI
clinics provide surgical abortions or abortifacient drugs and devices,
they would be flouting Afghan law which prohibits morning-after pills
and permits abortions only under very strict--practically
impossible--conditions. Violations carry with them a prison sentence of
seven years.
A prominent British Muslim has been presenting the pro-life
message to the people of Lebanon in the Middle East. Dr A Majid Katme,
a spokesman for the Islamic Medical Association on medical ethics,
visited a number of towns in Lebanon, speaking on radio programmes and
satellite channels and in town halls on abortion, human cloning and
anti-life pressures at the United Nations. Dr Katme told SPUC: "During
my visit to Lebanon I was very moved by the enthusiastic reception of
the Lebanese public to the vital pro-life message, and many radio and
other organisations asked me to stay longer to take the message to more
towns and cities. No doubt there is great potential for the pro-life
cause among the Arab Muslim and Christian communities."
A spokesman for New Zealand's national police has said that Dr
Philip Nitschke, the Australian pro-euthanasia campaigner, will
probably be allowed to distribute suicide bags in the country. Dr
Nitschke plans to bring the bags, which have an elasticised opening to
facilitate suicide, to New Zealand later this year. A spokesman at the
Police National Headquarters said that handing out the bags would
probably not constitute the offence of aiding and abetting suicide, but
that the police would have to investigate if an official complaint was
made. [
Stuff NZ News, 8 August]
Publicly funded researchers in the US are circumventing the ban on
destructive embryonic stem cell research by using private money,
according to a report in the New York Times. President Bush blocked the
use of federal funds for research involving the destruction of any more
embryos a year ago this week, but destructive embryo research remains
legal and so researchers can continue to destroy embryos as long as
they do so with private money. However, reports suggest that one effect
of President Bush's ruling over the past year has been that American
scientists have largely avoided the area of embryonic stem cell
research altogether. [New York Times, 6 August]
An Australian company intends to use tissue from aborted foetuses
in the commercial production of embryonic stem cells for export next
year. Robert Klupacs, chief executive of ES Cell International based in
Melbourne, said that he was unaware of any legal impediment to the
plan. The company is already exporting embryonic stem cells cultured on
tissue from mouse foetuses, but Mr Klupacs envisages a great demand for
stem cells cultured on human foetal tissue and hopes to perfect a
technique whereby billions of stem cells can be produced in
fermentation tanks. [
Herald Sun, 8 August]
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