News, 4 March 2002
SPUC has urged Irish bishops and other pro-life people to re-consider
their support for the government's proposed constitutional change,
after a Dublin maternity hospital said it would destroy frozen human
embryos if there was a 'yes' vote in Wednesday's referendum.
Yesterday's
Sunday Tribune reported that the Rotunda hospital, Dublin, would dispose of embryos created through
in vitro
fertilisation next year. The constitutional amendment would define
abortion as taking place only after an embryo had implanted in the
womb. Paul Tully, SPUC's general secretary, said: "If proof were still
needed that this proposed constitutional change would deny the right to
life, then here it is. Those who have hitherto felt that the amendment
would somehow help the unborn must now reconsider their position. Human
life at its most vulnerable will lose its legal protection if this
change is made. The pro-life way to vote on Wednesday is to vote 'no'."
The Ireland for Life organisation has said that it is appalled at the
Rotunda's statement and has drawn attention to a declaration by the
heads of three maternity hospitals that abortion should be allowed in
some circumstances. Pro-life lawyers in Britain have also sounded a
warning note. In its current newsletter, the Association of Lawyers for
the Defence of the Unborn says that voters should beware of "siren
voices" offering to clarify or strengthen abortion-law. The newsletter
describes the proposed definition of abortion as "bogus and false" and
hardly a sound foundation on which to protect the unborn. SPUC has
highlighted how Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo, the president of the
Pontifical Council for the Family, told a November meeting in Rome
that, while the situation in Ireland was delicate, he expected the
bishops to come out against the proposed constitutional change. SPUC
has since received a letter from Cardinal López's secretary indicating
that the cardinal had nothing to add, from which SPUC infers that the
cardinal still opposes the change despite pressure on him from the
'yes' campaign. SPUC is not aware of a personal statement by the Pope
on this matter. Dr Patrick McCrystal, executive director of Human Life
International for Ireland, has said that he cannot vote 'yes' and that
a 'yes' vote would be for direct intentional abortion. [SPUC
media-releases,
2 and
4 March,
News and Comment, ALDU, winter 2001-2, and HLI Ireland press release, 1 March]
A British pro-life group has challenged the Human Fertilisation and
Embryology Authority to confirm that research which it recently
licensed cannot alternatively be performed on animal embryos or adult
human stem cells. A ProLife Alliance press release points put that
dozens of laboratories are already conducting clinical trials of
treatments based on adult cells for diseases such as Parkinson's. [
ProLife Alliance, 4 March, and
SPUC, 26 February]
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