News, 21 June 2002
Dana Rosemary Scallon, a member of the European parliament for
Connaught and Ulster, has called for the resignation of Philippe
Busquin, the European Union's commissioner for research. Commissioner
Busquin stated last week that whenever one EU member state declared in
favour of a certain type of research, this could be funded and
sanctioned irrespective of the policies or constitutional positions of
other member states. The commissioner's statement came as members of
the EU Council of Ministers were due to decide finally on whether EU
money could be used to fund destructive research on human embryos -
which is illegal in a number of EU countries, including Ireland. Dana
said: "This has serious consequences for Ireland, our sovereignty and
the direction Europe is going." [Dana media release, 21 June]
German doctors have expressed alarm after a couple won a so-called
wrongful birth lawsuit in the country's highest court. The court ruled
that a doctor who failed to spot physical anomalies in an unborn child
during a prenatal scan at about 20 weeks' gestation must pay
compensation to the parents. The parents claimed that they would have
had their child, called Sebastian, aborted had they known that he would
be born with seriously deformed limbs. The ruling is the first time
that a 1995 German law which removed the 22-week time-limit for
abortions in cases of foetal disability has been confirmed in the
courts. Professor Joerg-Dietrich Hoppe, president of the German
Doctors' Association, said: "This understanding of human life stands in
the most crass contradiction to professional medical ethics and the
values of a humane society." [Reuters, 20 June; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
Newly published research has indicated that adult stem cells could be
just as versatile as stem cells extracted from embryos. Professor
Catherine Verfaillie and colleagues at the University of Minnesota
discovered that, among cultured stem cells extracted from the bone
marrow of adult rats, there were more powerful stem cells known as
multipotent adult progenitor cells (MAPCs). When put into rodent
embryos, these MAPCs differentiated into most, if not all, types of
cell in the body. Even the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority said that the research was "important and exciting". Peter
Garrett of the Life charity commented: "I think it is remarkable
research and vindicates the line of argument we have been using for the
last three years. You don't need to kill embryos to treat sick people."
[
BBC News online, 20 June]
The US Senate is once again debating whether to scrap the six-year ban
on privately funded abortions at overseas military facilities. The
issue has been coming up in Congress almost every year for some time,
but in 2000 there was only a one vote majority in favour of maintaining
the ban. The House of Representatives voted by 215 to 202 in favour of
maintaining the ban last month. [
AP, 21 June; via Northern Light]
Clergy representing a number of different Christian denominations will
gather in Washington DC next Tuesday to demonstrate their support for
new federal legislation to ban partial birth abortions introduced by
Rep. Steve Chabot. Rev Bob Schenck, president of the National Pro-Life
Religious Council, will attend the demonstration together with members
of Priests for Life (a Catholic organisation), the Orthodox Church in
America, Presbyterians Pro-Life, the African-American Life Alliance and
others. [
US Newswire, 10 June]
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