News, 7 March 2002
The Irish electorate has rejected an attempt by the government to amend
the constitution so that abortion would be defined as happening only
after implantation. 'No' votes in yesterday's referendum exceeded
affirmative votes by around one percent. [
Irish Times, 7 March]
SPUC has congratulated the coalition of more than 20 pro-life groups
which campaigned for a 'no' vote. John Smeaton, national director,
said: "They have given a courageous witness to the world that the right
to life of unborn children is non-negotiable. All people of good will
in Ireland must now unite behind the continuing campaign to protect
human embryos from destructive procedures and abortion-inducing drugs
and devices, looking forward in particular to the forthcoming general
election. The referendum was presented as legitimising, among other
things, the morning-after pill and other early abortion procedures. The
Irish people were told by their leaders that, unless they voted for
abortion on certain grounds, the government would legislate to allow
abortion when a woman threatened suicide. Pro-life voters were right
not to succumb to such blackmail. One may never do evil so that good
may come of it." [
SPUC, 7 March]
According to a US report picked up by the British media, a Chinese
scientist claims to have been creating human clones since 1999 and aims
to use them to create cell lines from which to grow organs for
transplant. Dr Lu Guangxiu of Changsha began by employing the same
technique as used in Britain to clone mammals but this produced too few
viable embryos using enucleated eggs. She has since had greater success
with injecting a donor's DNA into an egg and leaving it there for a
while before removing the egg's DNA. Five percent of such embryos
develop to the blastocyst stage and harvested stem cells only survive
for a short time. China has no laws on embryo research. [
Wall Street Journal reported in the
Guardian, 7 March]
Britain's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority has licensed a
fertility treatment centre in London to use genetic screening on
in vitro
fertilisation embryos. Dr Mohammed Taranissi of the Assisted
Reproduction and Gynaecology Centre has spoken in terms of "weeding out
problem embryos", a phrase described by Mrs Nuala Scarisbrick of Life
as very distressing. She said: "This sends out an awful message to
disabled people that they are effectively a waste of life." [
Times and London
Metro, 7 March]
The English high court has convened at the bedside of a 43-year-old
paraplegic woman who would like her life-support turned off. A
psychiatrist who testified described how he had left a pro-euthanasia
group after seeing how disabled people had been helped to cope. Dame
Elizabeth Butler-Sloss, head of the family division, presiding,
expressed concerns that members of the court might become emotionally
involved in the case, which continues. [
Times and
Ananova,
7 March] Paul Tully of SPUC said: "In general, all competent adult
patients may legitimately refuse treatment but doctors have a duty of
care and a legal and moral obligation not to assist in suicide by
action or omission. If the lady is saying that she wants her doctors to
help her commit suicide, the patient's right to refuse treatment is
being used to try to force the doctors to act in a criminal way. If all
she wants is for her treatment to stop and her disease to take its
course, her intention is not necessarily suicidal. Press reports of the
case fail to indicate if the question of assisting suicide was raised
by any of the three eminent barristers involved." In a web-based
debate, Alison Davis, leader of SPUC's handicap division and a sufferer
from spina bifida, emphysema and osteoporosis, described how she had
wanted to die for some 10 years and attempted suicide. Friends had
convinced her that her life had value and she hoped that the un-named
woman who was asking to die would receive similar support. [
BBC, 6 March]
The Argentinian supreme court has banned morning-after pills because
their abortifacient nature is against the country's constitutional
protection of human life from conception. The
Portal de Belen (Stable of Bethlehem) organisation persuaded the court to revoke health ministry approval for such pills. [
LifeSite, 6 March] The judgement is available in Spanish on the
supreme court's website.
Women will be allowed to adopt frozen embryos who have been created
through fertility treatment but are no longer wanted by their parents
under a new initiative in Canada. Ms Leslie Perkins of Toronto has
modelled the country's first such scheme on a system in the USA and
wants all parents of frozen embryos to take part. [
LifeSite, 6 March]
A United Nations group will meet next week to consider how developing
countries' fertility rates have fallen to below replacement levels. The
meeting is being convened by the population division of the economic
and social affairs department. [
LifeSite, 6 March]
Babies conceived by intracytoplasmic sperm injection and
in vitro
fertilisation are more likely to have developmental anomalies than
those created naturally, according to research performed in Australia
by Leicester university, England, reported in the
New England Journal of Medicine. [
Ananova, 6 March]
Human bone-marrow has been used by Minnesota researchers to repair brain-damage caused by ischemic strokes in rats. [
Experimental Neurology, March, reported on
Science Daily, 5 March]
Gynaecologists in Saudi Arabia have been the first to transplant a
womb. The operation took place two years ago though the womb needed to
be removed after 99 days because of blood-clotting. [
Guardian, 7 March]
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