News, 29 October 2002
The countries which are applying to join the European Union are set to
sign an agreement which ensures their full participation in the sixth
framework programme for research. The so-called memoranda of
understanding will mean that the EU candidate countries assume the same
rights and obligations under the programme as full EU member states.
Philippe Busquin, the EU's commissioner for research, welcomed the
agreement, but SPUC has expressed concern. Mr Busquin has been a
constant proponent of destructive research on human embryos, and there
is a danger that part of the 17.5 billion euro budget of the programme
could be used for destructive research after the moratorium on funding
for such research expires at the end of next year. This would mean that
tax-payers in candidate countries such as Malta and Poland would be
obliged to fund destructive research in direct contravention of their
pro-life ethos. [
MaltaMedia and SPUC, 29 October]
British scientists have developed a new technique to facilitate the
treatment of cancer patients with ethically derived stem cells. A team
at Cancer Research UK has genetically engineered stem cells from
donated bone marrow so that they are resistant to chemotherapy.
Meanwhile, a mother in Montreal, Canada, has been successfully treated
for leukaemia with stem cells extracted from the umbilical cord of her
own baby daughter. 27-year-old Patrizia Durante said: "I gave my
daughter life, and then she gave mine back." [
BBC News online, 29 October;
National Post, 26 October]
A spokesman for SPUC commented: "Almost every day there is further news
of the therapeutic potential of ethically derived stem cells. This
great body of evidence serves to repudiate entirely the claims of
British parliamentarians last year that the authorisation of so-called
therapeutic cloning was essential to develop stem cell technology."
Pro-lifers in Brazil have expressed concern at the election of an
allegedly pro-abortion president. Mr Luiz Inacio Lula won 61% of the
votes in the final round of the presidential election on Sunday, but Dr
Talmir Rodriguez, Brazil's representative on the board of the
International Right to Life Federation, has warned that Brazil's
pro-life constitution may now be threatened. The new president's
political party has a policy of legalising abortion on demand in the
first three months of pregnancy, and there are allegations that his
former mistress was put under pressure to abort their child. [
LifeSite, 28 October]
It is reported that Australian federal senators are deadlocked over
legislation to authorise destructive embryonic stem cell research. A
six-member committee of senators is evenly split on whether to
recommend the authorisation of destructive research and has produced
five different position statements on the legislation. The bill, which
has the support of the prime minister and has already been passed by
the House of Representatives, is expected to be debated by the full
senate next month. [Sydney Morning Herald, 25 October, via
Pro-Life Infonet]
Louisiana's department of health and hospitals has sent a written
apology to the nurse who claims that she was threatened with dismissal
for refusing to dispense the abortifacient morning-after pill [see
digest for 25 October]. Cynthia Day was also offered a reassignment and assured that she would not be required to provide the drug. [
Herald Tribune, 28 October]
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