News, 18 October 2002
The German delegate to negotiations on a proposed United Nations
convention against human cloning has described the pro-life position of
the United States as "morally questionable". In a rare breach of
protocol, Christian Müch, the German legal adviser to the UN, criticised
the American insistence on a comprehensive cloning ban because it
threatened speedy agreement on a convention to ban cloning for
reproductive purposes. Germany and France are pushing their plan for a
convention which would only ban so-called reproductive cloning but allow
the creation and destruction of cloned human embryos for experimental
and so-called therapeutic purposes. Meanwhile, German federal
politicians have expressed alarm at the position adopted by their
delegates at the UN because German law prohibits all forms of cloning.
[
C-FAM Friday Fax, 18 October]
It is reported that the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority (HFEA) will suggest that couples should be allowed to choose
the sex of their IVF baby for the purpose of "family balancing". A
consultation document prepared by the HFEA and seen by the BBC suggests
that sex selection techniques used in conjunction with IVF which are
presently only allowed on so-called medical grounds should be available
to couples who simply want to ensure that they have an equal number of
male and female children. [
BBC News online, 17 October] Techniques for
sex selection in IVF include sperm sorting (whereby only sperms most
likely to contain chromosomes of the desired sex are allowed to
fertilise the egg) and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (whereby
embryos of the undesired sex are discarded). Most IVF practices entail a
massive loss of early human life.
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) has said that
research into adult stem cell technology "has the potential to
revolutionise the practice of medicine". In a statement issued by the
AAOS observed that "research on human adult stem cells suggests great
potential for use in the development of tissue and cartilage
regeneration especially in the area of transplantation". Dr Joseph
Iannotti, an expert in orthopaedic surgery, told an AAOS conference that
"adult stem cells have not only proven to be effective in bone healing
today, they hold great promise for the future of orthopaedics".
[
LifeSite, 17 October] Adult stem cell technology is an ethical and more
promising alternative to the use of stem cells extracted from embryos
and to so-called therapeutic cloning.
The attorney who argued the case for a constitutional right to
abortion before the US Supreme Court in the case of Roe v Wade in 1973
has warned that the ruling could easily be reversed. Sarah Weddington
warned that President Bush could appoint supreme court judges who would
establish a majority on the bench against Roe v Wade, and that the US
congressional elections next month were crucial because a
Democrat-controlled senate would be expected refuse to approve such
nominations. [AP, 17 October; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
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, 2013