News, 8 November 2002
Official statistics revealed by a British government minister yesterday
indicate that 925,747 embryos have been created in the course of IVF
treatment in Britain since 1991, of whom only 423,153 [46%] were
transferred into a woman for implantation. Lord Hunt of Kings Heath, a
government health minister, also told the House of Lords that 225,627
embryos had been stored for the parents' later use, 448 were stored for
the use of someone other than the parents, 53,497 were donated for
[destructive] research, and 294,584 remained unused [and were
discarded]. Pro-lifers have estimated that the so-called wastage rate
in IVF is even higher than the government admits because many embryos
die very soon after fertilisation while still in the petri dish. Only
about 4% of IVF embryos survive until birth, and SPUC has estimated
that, in fact, around 1,200,000 embryos have died in the course of IVF
procedures in Britain since 1991. [
House of Lords Hansard, 7 November; SPUC, 8 November]
The new Republican majority leader in the US Senate has promised that
there will soon be a vote on federal legislation to ban partial-birth
abortions. The bill, which has already been passed by the House of
Representatives and has the full support of President Bush, was held up
in the Senate by the former Democrat majority leader, pro-abortion Tom
Daschle. Senator Trent Lott, the new majority leader following
Tuesday's elections, said: "I will call it up, we will pass it, and the
president will sign it. I'm making that commitment - you can write it
down." [
Pro-Life Infonet, 7 November]
The secretary general of the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims has
insisted that the proposed new Kenyan constitution must defend life
from the moment of conception. Commenting on the work of the
Constitution of Kenya Review Commission, Ahmad Khatif Muhammad warned
that the definition of life needed to be more clearly defined to
prevent "liberal and licentious" interpretations that would allow
abortion. The Muslim leader, who is also a former member of Kenya's
parliament, wrote: "'Life' should be defined as starting from
conception. The definition of 'life' is of great importance ... The new
constitution should not give licence to those who wish to terminate the
life of the unborn child." [
East African Standard, 6 November; via AllAfrica.com and Northern Light]
It has been suggested that the practice of mass weddings could help to
prevent sex-selective abortions in India. The dowry system, which
remains entrenched throughout much of India, leads to soaring wedding
costs and encourages some parents to use sex-selection techniques to
abort unborn girls whose dowries would otherwise cost them too much
money in the future. However, a Hindu priest in the northern state of
Himachal Pradesh reports that a record number of couples will marry in
a mass ceremony this year, at which the giving or accepting of dowries
is banned. [
Independent of Bangladesh, 7 November]
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