News, 8 May 2002
The president of the pontifical council for the family has accused
certain countries' representatives at this week's United Nations summit
on children of: "a selective, superficial or distorted recognition and
understanding of human dignity". Addressing religious leaders at the
UN, Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo pointed out how some delegations
purported to defend victims of oppression and discrimination, yet
failed to recognise the humanity of unborn children. The cardinal
hosted a meeting for pro-life and pro-family groups at the Holy See's
permanent mission in New York and urged everyone of good will to help
build a culture of life. [SPUC representative in New York]
The Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) is sending
fewer and fewer expectant women to adoption agencies so that, in 2000,
PPFA performed 80 abortions for each adoption referral. Between 1997
and 2000 the number of abortions by PPFA rose by 19% while annual
adoption referrals declined from over 9,000 to under 2,500. CNS News
has discovered that a PPFA abortion costs more than $300 and the
federation performed nearly 200,000 such procedures in 2000. [
CNS News, 8 May]
In an attempt to stop sex-selective fertility treatment, India's national government plans to prevent
in vitro
fertilisation clinics from determining the gender of embryos. It is
already illegal to use ultrasonic scanning to find out an unborn
child's sex. Studies suggest that almost all abortions in India kill
female children. [
CWNews on EWTN, 7 May]
The Canadian government is expected soon to publish a bill which would
allow stem cell research on human embryos. It is expected that
opposition to the measure will come from members of several parties on
both left and right. [
Canoe, 6 May]
A proponent of embryo research has told President Bush's bioethics
council that a product of human cloning can rightly be called an
embryo. Dr John Gearhart of Johns Hopkins University, Maryland, who
helped discover embyronic stem cells, said that an unnecessary change
of vocabulary would not alter the ethical issues. [
LifeSite, 7 May]
Shareholders in a major American investment company are being urged to
stop their chairman from making multi-million dollar corporate
donations to Planned Parenthood, the pro-abortion Catholics for a Free
Choice and providers of the RU-486 abortion drug. A motion proposed by
Mr Steve Mosher, president of the Population Research Institute, would
constrain Mr Warren Buffett, chairman of Berkshire-Hathaway Inc of
Nebraska. Mr Mosher is urging pro-abortion shareholders to support his
initiative if only to stop boycotts of the firm's products by pro-life
consumers. [
LifeSite, 7 May]
Plastic surgeons have grown bone, cartilage, skeletal muscle and nerve
cells from fat removed from patients by liposuction. Dr Peter Fodor of
Century City Hospital, Los Angeles, who presented the research, has
pointed out how fat is richer in stem cells than bone marrow and
suggests that patients have their extracted fat stored. [
LifeSite, 7 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