News, 18 January 2002
The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC) has condemned
a ruling by the English Court of Appeal which upholds flawed
legislation on human cloning. Three judges ruled that cloned human
embryos were governed by existing legislation. The decision overturns
the victory by the Pro-Life Alliance on 15 November in the
English High Court, which ruled that the Human Fertilisation and
Embryology Act 1990 did not cover embryos created by techniques other
than by fertilisation, such as cell nuclear replacement. SPUC
spokesman Anthony Ozimic commented, "The Court of Appeal has
interpreted the law in an alarmingly elastic way so as to allow
destructive research on human beings created through cloning. Such
shifting of the goalposts is unacceptable. Extending the definition of
an embryo in the Act is a matter for Parliament, not for the courts."
Mr Ozimic questioned aspects of the judgement. "Both the time limits
and consent provisions for the use of embryos in the 1990 Act only
apply to embryos created through fertilisation, not ones created
through cloning. It appears that anyone who gives a blood sample could
be cloned without their knowledge or consent, and their clone grown in
the laboratory for many weeks or months".[
BBC News online, 18 January]
Donations to the pro-life initiative of the late Cardinal Thomas
Winning, archbishop of Glasgow, have grown substantially following his
death last June. The initiative offers material support to pregnant
women in difficult circumstances and is administered by the Sisters of
the Gospel of Life, a new religious community founded by Roseann Reddy, formerly SPUC
development officer. A spokesman for the Catholic Church
was reported as saying: "For [Cardinal Winning], even one life saved
would have been enough, but now, through the generosity of people in
the aftermath of his death, many more lives will be saved and others
transformed." [
The Scotsman, 18 January]
A nurse who ran an illegal abortion racket at her home has been
sentenced to eight-and-a-half years in prison in Portugal. Maria do
Ceu Ribeiro was found guilty of practising abortion and other related
crimes. One woman upon whom Ribeiro had performed an abortion, as well
as six other people involved in the illicit business, were fined. 19
others alleged to have been involved in the racket were acquitted.
[
BBC News online, 18 January]
Women from the Australian state of Tasmania were referred for
abortions at taxpayers' expense during the period in which abortions
by doctors resident in Tasmania were illegal. For several weeks last
month, no abortions were performed by doctors resident in Tasmania
following a complaint by a medical student that abortion was illegal
under state law. The Tasmanian parliament passed emergency legislation
just before Christmas to allow abortion. It is reported that the
Tasmanian government referred 65 women for abortions in other
Australian states at a total cost of AUS$35,000. [
The Mercury, 18
January]
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