News, 16 December 2002
The Maltese government has been hailing its EU accession package,
including a protocol which formally recognises Malta's right to retain
its pro-life laws. Malta was one of 10 countries formally invited to
become full members of the European Union last week. If the accession
packages are ratified, the countries will join the EU on 1 May 2004.
Pro-lifers have expressed concern that EU membership would threaten
protection of unborn life in Malta and, even if Malta is allowed to
keep its pro-life laws at home, there is a risk that Maltese
contributions to the European Union budget could be spent on funding
abortions in developing countries or on destructive human embryo
research. A spokesman for SPUC, Europe's longest established pro-life
group, said: "The pro-life people of Malta should be extremely vigilant
in the years ahead to ensure that their country does not go down the
same road as Ireland, where the government is now tragically turning
its back on its pro-life constitution by funding the promoters of
abortion in developing countries both directly and indirectly through
the European Union." [
Times of Malta and SPUC, 16 December]
The US is coming under fire from pro-abortionists at the UN-sponsored
Asian and Pacific Population Conference taking place in Bangkok,
Thailand, this week. More than 30 countries are represented at the
conference, which has been organised by the pro-abortion United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA) and the UN Economic and Social Commission for
Asia and the Pacific. Pro-abortionists are hoping that the conference
will adopt a series of steps to implement the 1994 Cairo population
conference plan of action, but the US is concerned that this plan
includes language which is generally recognised as entailing access to
abortion. [
Pro-Life Infonet, 15 December;
Reuters, via ABC News, 16 December]
The Chinese government has approved the establishment of the country's
first national stem cell bank. When the facility at Tianjin, close to
Beijing, is opened in eight years time, it will probably be the largest
stem cell bank in Asia and will run alongside a medical centre for stem
cell therapy. [
The Straits Times, 14 December]
It is presumed that the Chinese facility will store stem cells
extracted from embryos and aborted foetuses. The British government is
funding a similar establishment in the UK.
Dr Severino Antinori has claimed that the world's first full-term
cloned baby will be born in Belgrade, Serbia, next month. Dr Antinori
had previously refused to name the location of the birth, but his
latest announcement has not dented the scepticism of other experts.
[Daily Telegraph, 16 December]
A prominent Cuban pro-life doctor who was released from prison on
31 October after serving a three-year sentence has been detained again.
Dr Oscar Elias Biscet was detained by police in Havana on 6 December
and is reportedly being held without charge. [Miami Herald, 14
December; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
Dr Biscet was expelled from the Cuban national health system and then
imprisoned after condemning the high abortion rate and was reportedly
subjected to torture in prison. Amnesty International declared him a
prisoner of conscience. Cuba has one of the highest abortion rates in
the world.
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