News, 27 December 2002
Clonaid, an organisation linked to the Raelian cult, claimed today that
the first full-term cloned human baby has been born alive and well.
Brigitte Boisselier, the scientific director of Clonaid, told a news
conference in Florida at 9 a.m. local time that a cloned baby girl
named Eve had been born yesterday by Caesarean section to a US woman,
but refused to identify the location of the birth. She offered no proof
of the birth, but promised that an independent expert would take DNA
samples from the baby and verify the claim soon. She also claimed that
another cloned baby was due to be delivered in northern Europe next
week, and a further three babies shortly afterwards. She said that two
of the expected babies were copies of dead children who had been cloned
from preserved cells. Clonaid has been involved in a race with Dr
Severino Antinori, the Italian fertility specialist, to claim the
world's first born-alive cloned human, but other experts have received
the claims with much scepticism. [
CNN and
BBC News online,
27 December] The Raelian cult teaches that humans were cloned from
aliens as part of a genetic engineering project run by
extra-terrestrials and views cloning as the key to eternal life.
Irish pro-lifers have expressed concern after the co-author of a
report on improved survival rates for newborn babies said that the
practice of aborting foetuses with disabilities in Ireland should be
taken into account when assessing the improvement. A report by
Ireland's Economic and Social Research Institute on perinatal
statistics for 1999 indicated that mortality rates for new-borns as
well as foetal deaths beyond 28 weeks' gestation fell by 18% during the
1990s, but co-author Miriam Wiley cautioned that the provision of
abortions in cases of foetal disability should be taken into account
when assessing Ireland's success relative to other countries. Pat
Buckley, the Irish director of C-FAM Europe, said: "I am both surprised
and shocked by this apparent admission that abortions are being
provided in Ireland because the right to life of all unborn children is
protected by our constitution. I find it quite astonishing that unborn
babies could be aborted on the grounds of disability here, and will
make urgent enquiries into the truth of this report." [Irish
Independent, 23 December; SPUC, 27 December]
The Dutch supreme court has ruled that mental suffering is not a
legitimate reason for legal euthanasia. The case before the court
concerned Dr Philip Sutorius, who assisted in the suicide of an
86-year-old former Dutch senator who was physically well but "tired of
living" in 1998. The original trial court found Dr Sutorius not guilty
of illegally assisting suicide, but an appeals court overturned this
verdict and the country's supreme court rejected the doctor's final
appeal on Tuesday. The ruling means that the Dutch law on euthanasia
differs from that passed in Belgium earlier this year, where
psychological suffering can be cited as a reason for euthanasia. [
BBC News online, 24 December]
Germany has issued its first permit to import stem cells destructively
extracted from embryos for use in research. A spokesman for the
government laboratory responsible for issuing such permits under a law
approved in April announced on Monday that the cells would be imported
from Israel and would be used by a team at the University of Bonn.
Three other requests for permits are still under consideration. Under
German law, the destructive extraction of stem cells inside Germany
remains illegal, but stem cells extracted from embryos abroad prior to
1 January 2002 can be imported for research projects of "overwhelming
significance" . [
AP, via ABC News, 23 December]
As expected, Senator Bill Frist has been chosen as the new majority
leader in the US Senate. Senator Frist was elected in a vote of
acclamation by fellow Republican senators during a conference call on
Monday. Pro-lifers have reacted cautiously to his appointment [see
digest for 23 December].
However, Gloria Feldt, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation
of America, the largest abortion provider in the US, complained that
Senator Frist had a "rabidly anti-choice track record". [
CNN and
PPFA, 23 December]
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