News, 26 June 2002
France's highest court ruled yesterday that an unborn child does not
have the legal status of a living person. Ms Sophie Potonet sued
medical staff for the death of her child in labour in 1991 and a lower
court found the doctor and midwife involved guilty of manslaughter. The
Cour de Cassation
has now overturned this judgement and stated that "the principle behind
the legality of crimes and punishment ... is opposed to the possibility
of trial for manslaughter in the case of a child not born alive". [
Reuters, 25 June]
Germany's state and federal health ministers agreed last Friday to
reject moves towards decriminalising active euthanasia. Germans can
already draw up so-called living wills to request the discontinuation
of life-sustaining treatment and the country's hospice foundation has
launched a publicity campaign about this. Meanwhile, an appeals court
in Italy has published the full text of a ruling made in April clearing
of murder a man who switched off his wife's ventilator. The court ruled
that the link between the disconnection of the ventilator and the
woman's death could not be proven beyond reasonable doubt. Mr Enzo
Forzatti was originally sentenced to six and a half years in prison for
'voluntary murder'. [Reuters,
21 and
25 June]
The full European parliament meeting in Strasbourg will vote on the
pro-abortion Van Lancker report tomorrow-week (4 July) at noon. The
report deals with sexual and reproductive rights and was adopted by the
parliament's women's commission on the fourth of this month. In its
present form, the report urges legal abortion and easy availability of
abortifacient morning-after pills in all European Union countries and
nations seeking membership, although criminal law and public health
services are outside the EU's competency. European pro-lifers are being
urged to contact their MEPs ahead of the vote. [
Euro-Fam, 25 June, and SPUC Brussels]
A pro-cloning scientist in the United States has claimed that research
on human cloning is well under way in China. Dr Xiangzhang Yang of the
University of Connecticut claims to have been briefed on human cloning
work in "half a dozen labs" in China, all of which have conducted
numerous experiments on human embryos. [
LifeSite, 25 June]
A Catholic diocese in southern Texas has banned two political
candidates from speaking on Catholic premises because they support
access to abortion. Mr Tony Sanchez, the Democratic candidate for state
governor, and Mr John Sharp, the Democratic candidate for lieutenant
governor, both claim to be Catholic and anti-abortion, but believe that
abortion is a personal issue which should not be legally restricted.
Bishop Edmund Carmody of Corpus Christi said: "That's being
schizophrenic about it. That's saying, 'In my home I respect life, but
when I'm in public office, I'm going to go with the pack.'" [
American-Statesman, 25 June]
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