News, 6 December 2002
The architect of Britain's embryology law has rejected the idea
that human embryos should be treated with "respect". Baroness Warnock,
whose committee drew up the report which led to the Human Fertilisation
and Embryology Act 1990, told the House of Lords last night that she
now regretted her report's use of the term "respect for the embryo". In
a debate on the House of Lords select committee report on stem cell
research, Baroness Warnock said: "You cannot respectfully pour
something down the sink--which is the fate of the embryo after it has
been used for research, or if it is not going to be used for research
or for anything else. I think that what we meant by the rather foolish
expression 'respect' was that the early embryo should never be used
frivolously for research purposes." Other contributors to the debate
criticised the 'arrogance' and 'ethical indifference' of the UK in
going against the international consensus by supporting destructive
stem cell research on cloned human embryos. [SPUC, 6 December]
SPUC has condemned the British government for giving more
bilateral overseas aid for abortion and population control than for
clean drinking water. A newly-published government report indicates
that the Department for International Development's 2001/02 bilateral
funding commitments are £260 million for "reproductive health
services", while "safe drinking water and adequate sanitation" are
accorded only £78.8 million. "Reproductive health" is a term commonly
used to include abortion, sterilisation and contraception. Anthony
Ozimic, SPUC's political spokesman, asked: "How can the government
justify spending almost three-and-a-half times more taxpayers' money on
preventing the poor from being born than on saving their lives by
giving them clean water? Water and food production are basic human
needs, but the British government prefers to promote its fixed ideology
of population control at the expense of the developing world." [
SPUC media release, 6 December]
Pope John Paul II has said that so-called Catholic universities which
do not respect the teachings of the Church on bioethical issues cannot
be defined as Catholic. Addressing a conference on the topic of
globalisation and Catholic universities, the Pope said that
faithfulness to Church teaching on "the big questions in bioethics,
such as the status of the human embryo and stem cells" was essential
because Catholic universities "have the duty to live the teaching of
the Magisterium". Meanwhile it was reported that the Jesuit Catholic
University of San Francisco offers a website on pregnancy containing
links to other websites which provide abortion referrals and the
abortifacient morning-after pill. [LifeSite,
5 December and
5 December]
Doctors in London have found that a common bacterial infection is
associated with an increased risk of miscarriage between 13 and 16
weeks into pregnancy. Philip Hay and colleagues at St George's Hospital
Medical School found that bacterial vaginosis (BV), which can be easily
treated by antibiotics and is most common in women who have a new or
multiple sexual partners, was a "major risk factor" after the 13th week
of pregnancy. The research was published in the British Medical
Journal. [
Reuters, 6 December]
Official figures released by the US Centers for Disease Control for 46
states and the District of Columbia indicate that just under 862,000
unborn children died in notified abortions in 1999. The total
represents a decline of 3.2% from 1998, and continues the downward
trend in abortion totals starting in 1991. The abortion ratio of 256
abortions per 1,000 live births in 1999 was the lowest since 1975,
although the abortion rate of 17 abortions per 1,000 women [of
childbearing age] was the same as in the previous two years. The
figures do not include abortions in Alaska, California, New Hampshire
or Oklahoma where reporting procedures are different. [
Washington Times and
LifeSite, 4 December]
Two pro-abortion groups were among the top 10 highest spenders among
interest groups on television advertisements during the national US
elections last month. The Wisconsin Advertising Project at the
University of Wisconsin found that Emily's List (which backed female
pro-abortion Democrat candidates) came fourth by spending $1.3 million,
while Planned Parenthood (the largest US abortion provider) came eighth
by spending $660,000. [Guardian Unlimited, 5 December] Despite this
expenditure, most pro-life commentators believe that the overall
election outcome was a great success for the pro-life cause.
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