News, 20 December 2002
In a major victory for the British pro-life movement, the high court in
London ruled today that the Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority (HFEA) acted beyond its powers in authorising the creation of
a so-called designer baby. Josephine Quintavalle, on behalf of Comment
on Reproductive Ethics (CORE), had brought a judicial review against
the HFEA's decision to authorise the use of in vitro fertilisation
(IVF) and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) by the Hashmi family
to create a baby who would serve as a perfect tissue donor for an older
sick sibling. In finding in favour of CORE, Mr Justice Maurice Kay said
that it was "a difficult area of medical science and ethics", but that
parliament had "tightly drawn" the legislation which regulates
embryology to "restrict the potential for misuse of science and
technology". SPUC have warmly congratulated Josephine Quintavalle on
her victory and for her "most courageous stand on this critically
important issue". The HFEA has already announced its intention to
appeal. [
BBC News online and
SPUC media release, 20 December]
Reports that the outcome of the UN-sponsored Asian and Pacific
population conference in Bangkok earlier this week represented a defeat
for the pro-life cause have been rejected by participants and
observers. Although the meeting decisively rejected attempts by the US
delegation to have pro-abortion language removed from the final
document, the US decision to force a vote on two of the most
controversial sections led many countries to add their own
clarifications firmly rejecting any interpretation of "reproductive
rights" that would include access to abortion. It has been a long-term
strategy of pro-abortion bodies and delegations at the UN to establish
a consensus on the view that access to abortion is entailed whenever
"reproductive rights" are mentioned, and so the outcome of the Bangkok
meeting may be seen as a success for the pro-life US negotiating team.
[SPUC, 20 December]
The European parliament yesterday rejected a proposed increase of 200%
in its budget for international population control [which entails the
provision of abortion]. At the first reading of the EU's annual budget
in the parliament, MEPs voted to increase the budget line dealing with
"aid for population and reproductive health care" from 8 million to 24
million euro [see
digest for 25 October].
However, the Council of Ministers then restricted the total to 14
million euro, and an amendment to restore the 200% increase was
decisively rejected by MEPs yesterday on the second reading. Pro-lifers
were pleased that the rise was less than pro-abortionists had hoped
for, but were disappointed that the budget line had been increased at
all. [
Euro-Fam,
Zenit, and SPUC, 19 December]
The pro-abortion Irish Family Planning Association (IFPA) has claimed
that demand for so-called emergency contraception at its clinics has
risen by 25% in the run-up to Christmas, and that demand is expected to
increase still further as the Christmas partying season reaches its
peak. Patrick Buckley, who is based in Ireland and is the European
director of the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute (C-FAM),
said: "It is deplorable that abortifacient morning-after pills are
available in the Irish Republic in direct contravention of our pro-life
constitution which protects all human life from conception.
Morning-after pills could only be supplied legally in Ireland if they
operated as contraceptives, but it is widely acknowledged that they
sometimes work by causing the death of a newly conceived embryo. The
IFPA is only able to provide morning-after pills because no legal
challenge to their supply has yet been mounted, although their supply
is surely legally indefensible." [Irish Examiner and SPUC, 20 December]
The Chairman of the US president's bioethics council has claimed
that Stanford university concealed the nature of their stem cell
research programme and misrepresented his views. Stanford university
announced earlier this month that it intended to conduct embryonic stem
cell research involving cell nuclear transfer techniques [see digest
for 12 December], but claimed that this should not be characterised as
cloning and had the support of the President's bioethics council. The
university later retracted the assertion that the council supported the
research, but maintained that it should not be described as cloning.
However, Dr Leon Kass, chairman of the council, demanded a public
apology and insisted: "It's absolutely critical that we call things by
their right name so we don't kid ourselves about what the moral issues
are." [
AP, 20 December; via Northern Light]
An Austrian archbishop has rejected a call by Austrian doctors for the
law to ensure only "gradual protection of human life". The group of
doctors were addressing the issue of when abortions should be allowed
up to 22 weeks' gestation, but Archbishop emeritus Andreas Laun of
Salzburg responded: "If the foetus is not yet a person, why is there
talk of the protection of life? However, if the foetus is already a
person, why must the protection of life be gradual? ... Systems that
consent to abortion no longer have any pretence to call themselves
'law'." [
Zenit, 19 December]
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