News, 26 July 2002
The Malaysian government is considering whether to legalise abortion in
cases of rape and incest. Abortion is already legal in Malaysia to
prevent injury to a woman's physical or mental health, but the health
ministry's parliamentary secretary has said that the government is
consulting relevant parties on whether the law should be amended to
include rape and incest as explicit grounds for abortion. The
announcement was made at a meeting organised by the International
Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), the world's largest provider and
promoter of abortions. [
The Star, Malaysia, 26 July]
The government of South Korea has launched an investigation into claims
by Clonaid, an organisation founded by the Raelian cult, that it has
successfully implanted a cloned embryo inside a South Korean woman. A
spokesman for Clonaid claimed that the woman was now two months
pregnant and was expecting a healthy child. The Raelian cult believes
that humans were cloned from aliens and views cloning as the key to
eternal life. [
ITV News, 26 July; see
news digest for 11 October 2000]
A baby who was conceived despite her father's vasectomy and who then
survived an abortion has been born in Norway. The healthy child was
born two months early in a car on the way to hospital, and has been
named Trude because this sounds similar to the Norwegian word for
"believe it". [Metro, 26 July]
Cardinal Aloysius Ambrozic, archbishop of Toronto, has been
cheered by pilgrims to the Catholic World Youth Day, being held this
week in his diocese, for strongly pro-life comments he made during a
catechesis session. The cardinal insisted that the Catholic Church
would "forever be opposed" to abortion and embryonic stem cell
research. [
LifeSite, 25 July]
British researchers have warned that women who take zinc supplements
during pregnancy could be harming the mental development of their
child. Many pregnant women, particularly undernourished women in the
developing world, take extra zinc to boost their unborn child's weight
and immune system. However, Professor Sally Grantham McGregor and her
colleagues at the Institute of Child Health in London have found that
zinc may have negative effects as well, and have recommended that the
effects of more comprehensive dietary supplements aimed at improving
the health of both mother and unborn child should be studied. [
BBC News online, 26 July]
Cardinal Johannes Joachim Degenhardt, the archbishop of Paderborn in
Germany and a staunch pro-lifer, has died suddenly at the age of 76.
Archbishop Degenhardt, who was made a cardinal by the Pope last year,
was one of the first German bishops to withdraw his diocese from a
state-sponsored pregnancy counselling scheme through which women could
obtain the necessary certificates for abortion. [
AP, 25 July; via Northern Light]
A pro-life member of President Bush's council on bioethics has
explained why he opposes destructive embryonic stem cell research. In
an interview with Zenit, an international Catholic news agency,
Professor Robert P George of Princeton University said: "It is
intrinsically unjust to treat human beings at any stage of development
as mere 'research material' to be exploited and destroyed in the hope
of benefiting others... The adult human being who is now you or I is
the same human being who was, at an earlier stage of his or her life,
an adolescent, and before that a child, an infant, a fetus and an
embryo... The status of the developing embryo as a human being is an
undeniable biological fact, not a contested religious dogma." [
Zenit, 25 July]
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