News, 28 February 2002
International pro-life leaders have warned that Christians in Ireland
cannot in conscience support proposed constitutional changes concerning
abortion and that the country's Roman Catholic bishops have
misunderstood the legal effect of proposed amendments. A letter to all
Roman Catholic priests in the republic, which urges them to advocate a
"no" vote in Wednesday's referendum, has been signed by Dr Jack Willke
(president of the International Right to Life Federation), John Smeaton
(director of SPUC in the UK), Jim Hughes (national president of the
Campaign Life Coalition in Canada) and other pro-life leaders from
Australia, Canada, Italy, Kenya, the UK and the US. [
SPUC, 28 February]
The Roman Catholic church in Germany has announced that it will
provide financial assistance to pregnant women who may otherwise
decide to have an abortion. The German episcopal conference will
allocate €6 million (about £3.7 million) each year
to the project which will offer assistance to women who decide not to
have abortions after visiting an abortion consultation centre. [
EWTN, 27 February]
The Wellcome Trust, a British independent research
charity, is reportedly planning to make millions of pounds available for
destructive stem cell research on human embryos. The trust is
expected to give grants to three teams of scientists carrying out
research on embryonic stem cells. Reports suggest that the decision by
a House of Lords select committee to endorse destructive research on
human clones will make Britain the world leader in such research.
The UK's Medical Research Council is hoping to attract top stem cell
specialists from abroad to carry out destructive experiments in
Britain. [
The Guardian, 28 February]
A woman with a genetic mutation which causes the early onset of
Alzheimer's disease has selected a child without the condition using
pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD). The child, who is now 18
months old, was chosen from among her siblings using PGD by experts
at the Reproductive Genetics Institute, Chicago. It is thought to be
the first time that PGD has been used to screen out embryos with this
mutation. [
BBC, 27 February]
Sinn Féin, an Irish nationalist political party, has confirmed its
support for abortion. Ms Joan O'Connor said that her party supported
access to abortion when a pregnancy resulted from rape or incest, or
when the mother's physical or mental health was threatened. [
The Irish Examiner, 21 February]
The government of Taiwan has banned destructive research on
cloned human embryos with immediate effect. The department of
health said that a consensus against cloning had been reached after
three public hearings. [
Zenit, 20
February]
Pope John Paul II warned yesterday that the acceptance of abortion
could lead to the downfall of democracy. Addressing the eighth general
assembly of the papal Academy for Life, the Pope said that an
interpretation of human rights which failed to respect the reality of
human nature could "drive democratic regimes to transform themselves
into totalitarian regimes". The Pope explained: "The distinction
sometimes made in certain official documents between a human being and
a human person to then apply the right to life and physical integrity
only to people who are already born is an artificial distinction
without scientific or philosophical foundation... Every human being,
from his conception to his natural death, has the inviolable right to
life and deserves all respect due to the human person." [
Yahoo! News,
28 February]
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