News, 15 May 2002
A European ethics committee has urged caution on human cloning, though
its reasons appear to be more to do with possible developmental
anomalies than the protection of human life. Mr Peter Whittaker of the
European Group on Ethics in Science and New Technologies said there was
a consensus about the illegality of cloning people who might be born.
However, his group was concerned that humans cloned for research could
age prematurely, as has been observed in cloned mammals which have been
brought to birth. Mr Whittaker wanted more work done on animal cloning.
[
Cybercast, 13 May]
Research on mice suggests that many cloned cells lack a gene which is
essential for development. Scientists at Pennsylvania university found
that the Oct4 gene was present in just a third of cells and some of
those had too little of it to be effective. Dr Hans Scholer's team also
found that cloned embryos were less likely to develop properly in the
womb. [
Ananova, 14 May]
Germany's main political parties want to let mothers choose to be
anonymous when having their newborn babies adopted.
Mothers would be able to name their babies and to change their minds
within eight weeks of the birth. They could write an explanatory letter
to be given to their children when they reached 16.
There is concern that unwanted babies are being abandoned or killed,
and that mothers are giving birth in insanitary conditions.
Critics of the proposal say that anonymity could conceal crimes such as
incest and would breach UN conventions on children's rights to know
their parents. They cite complaints from people in France where
anonymous birth has been allowed for several years.
[
Telegraph, 15 May]
Britain's national broadcasting organisation has been accused of being
scared of the abortion debate. Mr Daniel Johnson makes the assertion in
today's
Daily Telegraph
after the BBC chose to begin a television drama series about the secret
services with a programme featuring murderous British pro-life
activists led by an American woman. Mr Johnson says that the BBC's
corporate culture defends the shibboleths of the 1960s, including the
1967 Abortion Act, and alleges that there is a conspiracy to stop the
public from seeing the reality of the most widely-performed procedure
in the British health service. He points out that
Spooks failed
to distinguish between the peaceful campaigning of the real pro-life
movement and the activities of the fictional terrorists. A pro-lifer
was portrayed as caring only about the unborn. The violent organisation
in the programme had a name which combined words from the titles of two
genuine pro-life groups, and another militant organisation was
mentioned whose name included the title of another such group. [
Telegraph, 15 May]
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