News, 16 January 2002
Abortion has been legalised in Afghanistan. Abortion was completely
prohibited under the former Taliban regime, but the new interim
government has permitted abortions up to the third month of pregnancy
when the health of the mother is in danger. Abdullah Fahim of the
Afghan health ministry said that, in order to have a legal abortion, a
woman would have to obtain certificates from three doctors as well as
permission from the health ministry. Those who provide or obtain
illegal abortions face up to six months in prison. [
The Indian Express, 16 January;
SAPA, via News24, 15 January]
The British government is today appealing against a ruling in the High
Court that existing legislation does not regulate destructive research
on cloned human embryos. In a judicial review brought by the ProLife
Alliance, the High Court ruled last November that the definition of
"embryo" in the 1990 Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act did not
extend to embryos created by cell nuclear replacement--the cloning
technique used to create Dolly the sheep. This meant that human cloning
could not be regulated under the 1990 act and that votes in both houses
of parliament to authorise destructive research into so-called
therapeutic cloning were invalid. The government pushed emergency
legislation through parliament in December to outlaw the placing of
cloned human embryos inside women, but the hastily passed law did not
cover the creation of clones for research purposes. [
Ananova and SPUC, 16 January]
Pro-abortion doctors in the Republic of Ireland have formed an
organisation to campaign for permissive abortion laws. Doctors for
Choice, headed by Drs Peadar O'Grady and Mary Favier, is the first such
group in Ireland and aims to create a climate in which abortion becomes
an integral and respected part of Irish medicine. [
Irish Independent, 16 January]
Researchers in the United States have found that drinking alcohol
during pregnancy can alter thyroid hormone levels in mothers and unborn
children, thereby risking brain damage in the children. The findings in
this month's
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research
indicate that drinking alcohol can alter thyroid function and thus
deprive an unborn child of sufficient thyroid hormone. Professor
Timothy Cudd, co-ordinator of the research, explained: "The thyroid
hormone system plays important roles in growth, development and in the
function of other hormone and organ systems ... Clearly abstaining from
alcohol use during pregnancy is the safest course." [
BBC News online, 16 January]
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