News, 19 July 2002
Singapore is to become the second country in the world, after the UK,
to introduce regulations authorising the creation of cloned human
beings for research purposes. Tony Tan, Singapore's deputy prime
minister, said yesterday that the government had approved a set of
recommendations submitted by a bioethics advisory panel last month [see
digest for 8 July]. The new regulations, which have been modelled on
those adopted in Britain, will allow scientists to extract stem cells
from cloned embryos as part of research projects which have "strong
scientific merit" or "potential medical benefit". Researchers will be
allowed to keep cloned embryos alive for 14 days, after which time the
embryos must be killed. Catholic and Protestant groups in Singapore
have criticised the new regulations on the basis that the human embryo
is a human being from the moment of his or her creation. Mr Tan said
that no-one with conscientious objections would be compelled to take
part in embryonic stem cell research. [
CNN, 18 July]
News that prescriptions of the abortifacient morning-after pill to
girls under the age of 16 in England and Wales rose by 284% between
1992 and 2000 has been welcomed as a "step forward" by Britain's
largest private abortion provider. A spokesman for the British
Pregnancy Advisory Service said: "Increased use of emergency
contraception among young people should be seen as a step forward
rather than a cause for concern ... For those young people who are
having sex, contraceptive use shows a mature and responsible approach."
[
ePolitix, 18 July] The legal age of consent for sex in Britain is 16.
The US Senate yesterday passed the Born Alive Infants Protection Act by
unanimous consent. The legislation gives all babies who are born alive
full legal rights under federal law, even if they have survived a
botched abortion. It is the first pro-life measure to have been passed
by the Senate since Tom Daschle, the pro-abortion Democrat senator,
became the majority leader last year. The bill was passed by the House
of Representatives in March, and will now be sent to President Bush,
who has already signalled his strong support for it. [AP and NRL, 18
July; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
A coalition of feminist groups in the United States has launched a
campaign to dispel the commonly made link between feminism and
pro-abortionism. The Women Deserve Better coalition is planning a
series of events leading up to the 30th anniversary of Roe v Wade [the
US Supreme Court decision that declared a constitutional right to
abortion] next January. Serrin Foster, president of Feminists for Life
of America, one of the coalition partners, said: "40 million abortions
are a reflection that we have failed women and [that] women have
settled for less. It is time for us to systematically eliminate the
coercive factors that drive women to abortion." [
CNSNews, 18 July]
It is reported that the judiciary committee of the US House of
Representatives has approved new legislation to ban partial-birth
abortions by 20 votes to 8. Republican congressman Steve Chabot, the
bill's sponsor, claims that it could withstand a constitutional
challenge, but Congressman John Conyers, a Democrat member of the
committee, said that the measure showed "complete disregard" for the US
Supreme Court's decision in 2000 to strike down a ban on partial-birth
abortions passed in Nebraska. [
USA Today, 17 July]
A family planning clinic in Maine is giving away 1,000 packs containing
abortifacient morning-after pills this week. Sara Hayes, clinical
director of Tri-County Health Services, said: "Emergency contraception
makes such good sense and it can make a huge difference. These pills
are for women of all ages and from all walks of life. They are so much
better than crossing your fingers." The Maine Bureau of Health supports
the initiative as an opportunity "to give women more control over their
bodies", but the Christian Civic League of Maine has condemned the
availability of the drug because it can cause an early abortion. [
Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel, 18 July]
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