News, 11 June 2002
A British test-tube baby pioneer has said that he supports reproductive
human cloning as a treatment for infertility. Dr Robert Edwards, whose
work on
in vitro
fertilisation led to the birth of the world's first test-tube baby in
1978, said that the needs of childless couples should take precedence
over other considerations if the cloning process could be perfected. Dr
Edwards stressed that he would only support cloning for reproductive
purposes if researchers could overcome the present problem of
"horrific" abnormalities in cloned animals, but Josephine Quintavalle,
director of Comment on Reproductive Ethics, warned: "You could never
perfect cloning on humans without experimenting on humans, and that is
something that the world has agreed should never happen again after
Nazi Germany." [
The Washington Times, 9 June]
It is reported that forced abortions and infanticide have become common in North Korean prisons. The
New York Times
has reported claims by North Korean defectors that the country's prison
officials routinely give pregnant inmates injections to induce
abortions, or smother newborn babies to death when pregnancies go
undetected. According to the report, forced abortions in North Korean
prisons have become common since China recently began to deport
thousands of refugees back to the country. The killings have
"nationalistic overtones" because guards intentionally single out
refugees thought to have been impregnated by Chinese men. [
New York Times, 10 June; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
Canadian Lutherans will decide on Saturday whether to become more
proactive in the pro-life campaign. The Lutheran Church of Canada,
which has 80,000 members across the country, is holding its triennial
conference in Kitchener, Ontario. Leonard Harms, director of the
denomination's social ministry service, said that he was optimistic
that a proposal to establish a national right to life organisation
would be approved by delegates. He said: "There's growing concern among
Lutherans across the country about life issues like embryonic stem cell
research, abortion and cloning. They want us to be more organised to
make our voices heard." [
CP, via Brockville Recorder and
Times, 7 June]
A man has been sentenced to life imprisonment in the US for killing his
unborn child. John Broe, aged 25, was sentenced on Friday by a court in
Cincinnati to serve two consecutive life sentences for the murders of
his wife and their unborn child last September. Mrs Broe was five
months pregnant at the time of the killings. [
The Cincinnati Enquirer, 8 June]
The US senate could start debating whether to pass a comprehensive ban
on human cloning as soon as this week. Senator Sam Brownback, who is
co-sponsoring a bill to ban all human cloning, has said that he might
attach the legislation as an amendment to another bill if his
colleagues continue to delay debate on the measure, which has already
been passed by the House of Representatives and has the full support of
President Bush. It is thought that a number of senators remain
undecided on the issue. [
Baton Rouge Advocate, 9 June; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
Concerns have been raised in Thailand that women are making dangerously
excessive use of the abortifacient morning-after pill as a regular
method of birth control. Records of family planning clinics in Bangkok
suggest that it is not uncommon for women to be taking more than 10
morning-after pills a month, and many of them are reporting a variety
of side-effects associated with use of the drug. The morning-after pill
has been sold over the counter in Thailand for 15 years, but many users
continue to misunderstand how to take it and how it works. According to
the
Bangkok Times, studies have also indicated that the morning-after pill is being used by men to exploit women. [
Bangkok Post, 10 June]
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