News, 27 May 2002
Tony Blair, the British prime minister, has given his enthusiastic
backing to all types of stem cell research. In a speech to the Royal
Society in London, Mr Blair pledged to make Britain the "best place in
the world" for stem cell research and said that anti-science prejudice
was "profoundly damaging". He told the audience that Britain should be
a nation "at ease with radical knowledge, not fearful of the future". [
Daily Telegraph,
24 May] The UK remains the only country in the world whose parliament
has voted to authorise the creation and destruction of human clones for
research.
SPUC has criticised the British government for holding up
agreement on the European Union's research budget by pushing its own
agenda in favour of embryo research. The UK is refusing to back down on
its insistence that destructive research on human embryos should be
included in the EU budget for the next four years. This is despite the
fact that such research is illegal in a number of EU member states,
such as Ireland where it is prohibited by the constitution. Germany,
Italy and Austria have recommended that destructive embryo research
should be excluded from the EU budget, and a number of other countries
are ready to support them. Only the UK and some Scandinavian countries
are now standing in the way of agreement. Representatives of EU
national governments will meet on Wednesday to decide how to proceed. [
SPUC, 27 May]
A university in California has become the first major public
institution in the United States to confirm that it has conducted
large-scale research into the cloning of human beings for so-called
therapeutic purposes. The project aimed at deriving stem cells from
cloned embryos began at the University of California-San Francisco
three years ago, but was suspended after it failed to produce
conclusive results. The leader of the project was Roger Pedersen, who
has since moved to Britain. The US Senate is expected to vote on
whether to pass a comprehensive human cloning ban next month. [
New Zealand Herald, 26 May]
A prominent Jewish Orthodox rabbi in Ottawa, Canada, has spoken out
against abortion. Rabbi Reuven P. Bulka, founder of Clergy for a United
Canada and a noted scholar, author and broadcaster, wrote in a
newspaper: "...abortion is nothing less than the murder of a child
in utero. This is not a women's-rights issue: This is a fetal-rights issue." [
LifeSite, 24 May, and other sources]
A columnist in a British national newspaper has suggested that Mrs
Cherie Blair, the prime minister's wife, should have aborted her
youngest child to prove her feminist credentials. Julie Burchill, who
has had five abortions, writes in
The Guardian:
"Cherie Blair can call herself a feminist all she likes, but any
feminist worth her salt would have made a point of having a
termination--on the NHS, naturally--when she got [pregnant] the last
time. Wantonly giving birth to a fourth child on a planet buckling
under the strain of overpopulation certainly isn't any sort of example
to set for gymslip mums, who can at least plead ignorance and rampant
fertility." [
The Guardian, 25 May]
A spokesman for SPUC commented: "This was a gratuitous and misplaced
attack. Mrs Blair has done nothing to embarrass her husband over his
strong pro-abortion stance, other than giving birth. Moreover, the
overpopulation myth has been rejected even by the United Nations, and
Britain's birth rate is now way below replacement level."
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