News, 20 May 2002
The decision by Belgium's parliament to legalise euthanasia has been
criticised by both the country's doctors and Catholic bishops. A survey
carried out last year found that 75% of doctors opposed the law, and
Marc Moens, vice-chairman of the Belgian medical chamber, said:
"Doctors know that this law is simply flawed and find it totally
unacceptable that individuals who are not terminally ill will also be
eligible for euthanasia." In a statement issued on Friday, the bishops
condemned the vote because euthanasia was "directly opposed to the
fundamental respect for human life that lies at the heart of a society
based on human dignity." [
Reuters, 16 May;
Pro-Life Infonet, 20 May]
The newly elected government of the Netherlands favours a revision of
the country's law which permits euthanasia. The Christian Democrats
(CDA), who had opposed the legislation for euthanasia debated in
parliament last year, won the largest number of seats in the Dutch
general election last week. Albert Jan Maat, a CDA member of the
European parliament, said: "The reality is that people are not so keen
on euthanasia as on greater possibilities of care and palliative
treatment, and this is a request that gained ground when euthanasia was
legalised in the country." [
Zenit, 17 May]
Doctors in China are reported to have transplanted the ovaries of an
aborted baby girl into a 28-year-old woman to treat her for the
premature onset of the menopause. The Xinhua news agency reported that
the woman was experiencing a number of symptoms associated with the
menopause, such as coarse skin and insomnia, but that these symptoms
disappeared after the surgery at Zhengzhou university hospital in
central Henan province. [
News24, 19 May]
It has been estimated that Life Assistance Centres in Italy have saved
the lives of 55,000 children since they began operating 25 years ago.
The centres, which are an initiative of Italy's Pro-Life Movement, are
thought to have prevented 6,000 abortions last year alone. A spokesman
said that 16% of pregnant women who sought help at the centres already
had an abortion certificate, and that 83% of these then decided to
continue with their pregnancy. [
Zenit, 19 May]
The Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute (C-FAM) has alleged that
"reproductive rights" campaigners who lobbied and disrupted meetings at
the recent UN child summit were representatives of abortion equipment
dealers. Lobbyists for Ipas wore bright green T-shirts bearing the
slogan: "Supporting sexual and reproductive rights for all." Ipas has
produced and sold manual vacuum aspirators, a portable device which can
be used for procuring abortions, since 1973. Such devices have been
used in refugee camps. [
EWTN News and SPUC, 17 May]
A prominent pro-life US senator is planning to introduce legislation
which would prohibit the patenting of human beings, including cloned
human embryos. Senator Sam Brownback's initiative came after it was
reported that the US Patent and Trademark Office had granted a patent
to the University of Missouri last year which might cover cloned human
embryos. It is thought that the prohibition of slavery in the US
constitution would prevent the patenting of cloned embryos, but Senator
Brownback said that his measure would clarify the matter. Some legal
experts believe that even a patent on a particular cloning process
could give the holder of such a patent some rights over the people
produced by means of the process. [
Wall Street Journal, etc., via
Pro-Life Infonet, 20 May]
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