News, 11 February 2002
SPUC's judicial review of the British government's decision to make the
abortion-inducing morning-after pill available from pharmacists without
a doctor's prescription begins tomorrow. The hearing will commence at
10.30
a.m. in court 27 of the High Courts in London. It is expected that the hearing will last about two days.
Scientists in the US have succeeded in extracting adult stem cells from
small deposits of fat behind the kneecap. A team at the Duke University
Medical Center, North Carolina, also managed to convert the cells into
functioning cartilage, bone and fat cells. Quinn Wickman, the
co-ordinator of the research, said: "In scientific terms, we have found
a new source of adult stem cells that can be changed into different
cells and tissues. On the clinical side, for example, it would be
relatively easy for a knee surgeon to obtain some of these fat cells
using a minimally invasive approach." [
BBC News online, 11 February]
This development provides yet more evidence of the potential of adult
stem cell technology as an ethical alternative to the use of embryonic
stem cells and so-called therapeutic cloning.
The Dutch floating abortion clinic which docked in Dublin last year amid much publicity [see
news digest for 15 June 2001]
has lost its licence. Els Borst, the Dutch health minister, said that
she admired the work of the Women on the Waves foundation, which aimed
to abort unborn children protected by their mother-countries' laws. A
government spokesman explained: "It doesn't make any difference that
the organisation is only using the abortion pill. It is goes wrong,
patients need to be cared for in a proper clinic, and at sea it's just
impossible." [Ireland online, 9 February; via Pro-Life Infonet]
Legislators in Guernsey, one of the Channel Islands, are to
consider whether to reclassify the abortifacient morning-after pill as
a drug available from pharmacists without prescription. Guernsey's
board of health has decided against reclassifying the drug, but Judy
Beaugeard, a former vice president of the board, plans to table a
requete [private member's petition] in the States [Guernsey's
parliament] in June. [
Guernsey Press, 5 February]
Mrs Diane Blood, the widow who won the right to use the frozen sperm of
her dead husband to conceive a child in 1997, is pregnant again with
her dead husband's second child. The Court of Appeal in London ruled in
February 1997 that Mrs Blood had the right to use the sperm of her dead
husband to conceive a child, although her husband's name cannot appear
on the birth certificate. [
Daily Telegraph, 9 February]
The US administration of President Bush has intervened in a legal
challenge to Ohio's partial-birth abortion ban. The Department of
Justice has filed a brief in the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit in support of Ohio's ban, claiming that it differs from
Nebraska's ban on partial-birth abortions which was overturned by the
US Supreme Court. [
EWTN News, 8 February]
The leader of the Roman Catholic Church in South Africa has called for
an end to legalised abortion in response to a request by President
Thabo Mbeki for religious leaders to help address the country's moral
decline. Cardinal Wilfrid Napier, archbishop of Durban, said that
stopping abortion would demonstrate the president's seriousness in
calling for a moral renewal. [
LifeSite, 5 February]
Official figures have revealed that doctors prescribed lethal doses of
drugs to 44 patients last year under Oregon's Death with Dignity Act.
21 of these patients took their own lives. The law is subject to an
ongoing legal action after the US attorney general attempted to
invalidate the law. [
The Washington Times, 8 February]
Japanese scientists have concluded that cloned mammals die sooner than
those which had a natural origin. Researchers at the National Institute
of Infectious Diseases in Tokyo studied a dozen cloned mice for two
years, and saw all but two of them die prematurely from pneumonia or
liver disease. A report prepared by the research team observed: "The
possible negative long-term effects of cloning, as well as the high
incidence of spontaneous abortion and abnormal birth of cloned animals,
give cause for concern about attempts to clone humans for reproductive
purposes." [
The Guardian, 11 February]
A spokesman for SPUC commented: "The fact that the cloning process
causes both short and long term side-effects in clones surely casts
doubt on the safety of so-called therapeutic cloning, and further
enhances the case for the ethical alternative of adult stem cell
technology."
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