News, 9 May 2002
US delegates to this week's United Nations conference on children are
pressing for the deletion of parts of the draft summit document which
would promote abortion and undermine families. America wants no mention
of reproductive health services--acknowledged code-words for abortion
provision--and wants the meeting's recommendations to foster
relationships between parents and children, and to promote the
postponement of sexual activity. The US, whose delegation is led by Mr
Tommy Thompson, President Bush's health and human services secretary,
is supported by Muslim countries and the Vatican but opposed by
European and Latin American nations. The three-day special session of
the UN's general assembly concludes tomorrow. [
Washington Post, 9 May]
Researchers in northern England have developed a new technique for
screening human embryos to discover which are more likely to develop
successfully in the womb. The team working at York University and Leeds
General Infirmary place two-day old embryos in an amino acid culture
and monitor their development. [
BBC, 8 May] Embryo screening, by whatever method, is customarily part of the
in vitro fertilisation process in which human lives are routinely destroyed.
The president of the Population Research Institute has joined those who
are warning that American investigators may not discover the truth
about UN-supported forced abortion during a forthcoming visit to China.
Mr Steven Mosher's concerns echo those of Representative Chris Smith on
which we
reported
on Tuesday. Mr Mosher also points out that President Bush has asked Mr
Colin Powell, the US secretary of state, to decide whether the UN
Population Fund's activities contravene American law, and that Mr
Powell has been taking a liberal line resembling that of former
President Clinton. [
Population Research Institute, 8 May]
A nurse in the Netherlands has been charged with murdering 14 patients
with injections of substances such as morphine and potassium. The
40-year-old woman is said to have killed five children and nine old
people in four hospitals in the Hague between 1997 and last year. She
is also accused of the attempted murder of four people and forging
educational certificates. [
Guardian, 9 May] Euthanasia formally became legal in the Netherlands at the start of this year.
A group of pro-life organisations in the US has likened research on
cloned humans, for which there is currently a proposal in the senate,
to Nazi experimentation. The National Pro-Life Religious Council was
commenting on a measure sponsored by, among others, Senators Edward
Kennedy and Orrin Hatch which would permit the creation of clones but
forbid their being allowed to be born. [
Cybercast, 7 May]
A Christian minister has caused controversy by praying about abortion
at the opening of the Kansas senate. Rev Joe Wright asked for
collective forgiveness for having described evil things as good and
said: "We have killed our unborn and called it choice, we have shot
abortionists and called it justifiable". Some legislators left in
protest but thousands of people subsequently telephoned Rev Wright's
church to express support and ask for copies of the prayer. [Mrs
Mercedes Wilson, 8 May]
Virtual reality technology will let parents touch a three-dimensional model of their unborn child. Novint Technologies'
e-Touch
system creates the tactile experience from ultrasonic scans and the
price of such a procedure will be $250. The company says the technology
will also help with diagnosis and planning for surgery. [
LifeSite, 8 May]
The text of the address by Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo to religious
leaders at the United Nations summit on children, on which we
reported yesterday, can be found at
www.zenit.org/english/visualizza.phtml?sid=20311. In it the cardinal points out how the
UN's 1959 Declaration of the Rights of the Child calls for children to have safeguards, care and legal protection: "before as well as after birth".
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