News, 25 January 2002
The Roman Catholic bishops of Germany have condemned all research
involving the destruction of human embryos, including research on
embryonic stem cells imported from abroad, ahead of a vote on the
subject next Wednesday in the German parliament. A statement by the
bishops' permanent council stated: "The importation of embryonic stem
cells accepts, in fact, the killing of people in the embryonic stage,
and this is in fundamental opposition to Christian ethics." The
destruction of embryos for research purposes is currently banned in
Germany, but last year the governor of one German state authorised the
importation of embryonic stem cells extracted in Israel, and the year
before a group of scientists announced their intention to import an
embryonic stem cell line from the USA. [
EWTN News, 24 January; also SPUC digests for
21 June 2000 and
6 June 2001]
New research published in the UK has suggested that the unborn babies
of people living near landfill sites are more likely to develop
anomalies such as Down's syndrome and cleft palates. Researchers at the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine looked at those with and
without developmental anomalies who lived near 23 landfill sites across
Europe, and found that those who lived near the sites had a 40 percent
higher risk of congenital chromosomal anomalies. Fresh data taken from
a 1998 study also indicated a 33 percent increase in non-chromosomal
anomalies, including neural tube defects [such as spina bifida] and
cleft palates. [
BBC News online, 25 January] In the UK, unborn babies found to have these anomalies are usually aborted, and the abortions can take place up to birth.
Two women who have first-hand experience of China's coercive population
control policy are urging US President Bush to cut all American finding
for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). Gao Xiao Duan used to
be an administrator in a Chinese planned birth control office, while Ma
Dong Fan claims that she was forced to have an abortion, was fitted
with an abortifacient intra-uterine device without her knowledge, and
was later forced to accept Norplant, an abortifacient birth control
implant. The two women are now in the United States and revealed their
experiences at a press conference organised by Concerned Women for
America. China's population policy is supported by UNFPA. [
US Newswire, 24 January; via Northern Light]
An official United Nations report contains an admission that legal
abortions are "hazardous to women's health". In the initial report on
Estonia prepared by the United Nations Committee on Elimination of
Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), one of the committee's 23 experts
observes anonymously: "Aside from physical complications, termination
of pregnancy could entail psychological problems. It could also lead to
infertility." The admission has surprised many observers of CEDAW's
activities because it usually adopts a strident pro-abortion position. [
LifeSite, 24 January]
An American teenage model has won her campaign to be allowed to wear
shirts bearing pro-life slogans at school after a law firm threatened
to take the school to court for violating the constitution. Samantha
Gallardo was denied permission by her high school in Littlerock,
California, to wear clothes bearing messages such as "Abortion is
killing" and "I'm Pro-Life". The pupil then approached the Thomas More
Law Center in Michigan, which wrote to the school reminding the staff
of Samantha's constitutional rights [of freedom of expression].
Samantha makes the shirts and distributes them among other students. [
EWTN News, 24 January]
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