News, 23 October 2002
Participants in an international bioethics forum have agreed a number
of resolutions in defence of the human embryo. About 600 people
attended the conference on the embryo in Brussels last weekend, which
opened with a message of support from Pope John Paul II. At the end of
the meeting, the participants requested the prohibition of all forms of
manipulation of the embryo, including cloning, and an end to the
subsidising of research on embryos which "violates in them the dignity
of humanity". [
Zenit, 22 October]
The supreme court of Arizona has ruled that poor women have a right to
publicly funded abortions when the procedure is deemed 'medically
necessary'. Arizona state law had restricted Medicaid funding for
abortion to cases of rape, incest or danger to the life of the mother.
However, a lawsuit brought by abortion clinics and doctors claimed that
the law was discriminatory, and the supreme court justices agreed with
their argument by three votes to two. [
AP, via ChannelOklahoma.com, 22 October]
The Roman Catholic archdiocese of Santa Fe in New Mexico has
distributed a flyer which provides a non-partisan pro-life evaluation
of political candidates to all its 92 parishes. The archdiocese has
asked the parishes to distribute the information flyer, which was
prepared by Right to Life New Mexico ahead of elections next month. The
flyer has proved controversial because it observes that the Democratic
candidate for governor has shown a lack of respect for life whereas his
Republican opponent is pro-life. [
LifeSite, 22 October]
Pro-abortionists in Canada are suing two Canadian provinces over their
refusal to pay for abortions. The Canadian Abortion Rights Action
League is supporting Dr Henry Morgentaler, a prominent abortionist, in
his lawsuits against Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. They claim that the
provinces are obliged to fund the full cost of abortions in private
clinics under the Canada Health Act [although this appears to be based
on the erroneous assumption that elective abortions are medically
necessary]. Dr Morgentaler has launched similar actions against Quebec
and Manitoba. [
Canada Press, 22 October]
A team of American researchers has developed a technique for
multiplying umbilical cord stem cells in the laboratory. Stem cells
from the umbilical cord are already used in the treatment of leukaemia,
but doctors have previously only been able to extract enough stem cells
to treat a child. Scientists at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center in Seattle have now managed to multiply the most primitive type
of stem cells by as much as 100 times. Mr Ken Campbell of the UK's
Leukaemia Research Fund commented: "This demonstration is a significant
step towards possibly expanding the use of blood stem cells for
treatment of an adult." [
NewScientist.com, 22 October]
The use of stem cells from umbilical cord blood is an ethical
alternative to the destructive extraction of stem cells from embryos
and to so-called therapeutic cloning.
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