News, 8 March 2002
Dana (Mrs Rosemary Scallon MEP) has called for Ireland's pro-life
people to unite in calling for "the option to vote for clear and
unambiguous protection of human life from the moment of conception".
Mrs Scallon said: "As we approach a general election I will be working
to make this principle a political priority thereby confirming, once
and for all, the will of the people on this issue--protection for human
life from the moment of conception which is fertilisation." Speaking of
Wednesday's referendum, she said: "Nothing has changed. Our
Constitution is still intact and human life is still protected from the
moment of conception--a principle which is non-negotiable. It was wrong
to politicise this issue and the government must carry the
responsibility for the confusing, misleading and dividing of people
through the lack of adequate information." Mrs Scallon warned
politicians and parties that, should they attempt to pass any
legislation against the will of the people, they would alienate the
electorate. [media release, Lindsey Holmes Publicity, 7 March]
A submission from SPUC has persuaded a parliamentary committee to
urge the British government to raise coercive population control during
human right talks with China. In its response to the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office's 2001 Human Rights Annual Report, the House of
Commons Foreign Affairs Committee said: "[In the] Report the Government
sets out ten objectives of a high-level critical dialogue on human
rights issues between China and the United Kingdom and its EU partners,
objectives with which we agree. There is, however, one omission. We
suggest that the human rights abuses which have occurred as a result of
China's population control programme (footnote to SPUC
submission)--"coercive fertility control", as described by the Secretary
of State for International Development--should also appear as a matter
to be addressed in this list of objectives, and should be mentioned in
future Human Rights Annual Reports." [
SPUC, 8 March]
The leader of a United Nations investigation on Chinese population
control has contradicted his own statement that Chinese officials were
absent while he and his team interviewed citizens in the street. Mr
Nicholas Biegman, a former Dutch diplomat, revoked previous testimony
to the US Senate while being questioned by Senator Sam Brownback. He
said that officials had been present but that his team had distracted
them, which caused laughter among observers at the hearing. The US
State Department has undertaken to investigate the role of coercion in
Chinese population control further. [
Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute, 8 March]
After
reports yesterday of cloning in China, a Shanghai biologist is reported in the
Wall Street Journal
as claiming to have created embryos by fusing human tissue with
rabbits' egg cells. Dr Sheng Huizhen used to work at the National
Institutes of Health, Maryland, and has presented her results at Texas
university. [
LSN on EWTN, 6 March]
Professor Lord Winston, the fertility expert, has complained that the womb-transplant in Saudi Arabia
reported on yesterday
has raised false hopes among women who cannot bear children. He
reportedly described the operation as a failure and compared it to
putting rotting meat in the pelvis which could cause thrombosis. Other
British experts said that such transplants could help women. [
Times, 8 March] Professor Winston previously advocated pelvic surgery as a better prospect for infertile women than
in vitro fertilisation (IVF). He has apparently changed his mind, now being the leading British advocate of IVF.
A British scientist who helped clone the first mammal is to move to
Singapore to run a project which will produce stem cells from human
embryos. Dr Alan Colman, who was part of the team which produced Dolly
the sheep, will join ES Cell International, an Australian company.
Singapore has identified life sciences as a key growth sector and will
open Biopolis, a biomedical research centre, next year. [
CNS News, 7 March]
Texas university researchers have found that human blood stem cells can
be used to grow gut- and liver-tissue, and skin. Blood stem cells
closely resemble those from bone marrow. [
New England Journal of Medicine via AP on
New Jersey online, 7 March]
Archbishop Mario Conti of Glasgow, Scotland, will tomorrow open a
pro-life centre named after Cardinal Thomas Winning, his predecessor.
The premises will house a project which was founded five years ago by
the late cardinal and which has helped the mothers of more than 400
babies. The pope has praised the project, as has Professor Germaine
Greer, the feminist writer, for providing an alternative to abortion. [
Zenit, 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