News, 8 October 2002
Pro-lifers on both sides of the Irish Sea have urged voters in the
Republic of Ireland to reject the Nice treaty in the forthcoming
referendum on 19 October. Dana Rosemary Scallon, the pro-life member of
the European parliament for Connaught and Ulster, warned that the
treaty would further confirm the European Union's Charter of
Fundamental Rights as the first pillar of a future European
constitution, which could then be used to override Ireland's
constitutional protection of the unborn. In a message to Irish clergy,
John Smeaton, UK director of SPUC, also urged a 'No' vote in the
referendum. Mr Smeaton cited the concerns expressed by Pope John Paul
II about the Charter in 2000, and warned that the erroneous
understanding of the human person in the Charter of Fundamental Rights
could further erode protection of early human life in Ireland and other
pro-life countries. [
SPUC, 7 October; Dana Rosemary Scallon MEP, 4 October]
Italy's Pro-Life Movement has praised the Italian government for
opposing European Union funding of destructive embryonic stem cell
research. When the EU's Council of Ministers voted last week on the
specific projects to be funded under the Sixth Framework Programme for
research, only Italy maintained its opposition to destructive embryonic
research. However, this was sufficient to obtain a moratorium on
funding for destructive research at least until the end of next year.
The question of whether funding for destructive research will be
allowed after this time is dependent on the conclusions of a seminar of
European bioethics institutions next year. Carlo Casini, president of
Italy's Movimento per la Vita, said: "The answer to this question is
the indispensable assumption needed to make decisions on
experimentation with embryos. In fact, if the embryo is a person and
not a thing, then he/she cannot be treated as a means to attain other
ends, even if they are noble." [
Zenit, 2 October;
Euro-Fam, 5 October]
The Catholic bishops of Ireland have insisted that euthanasia can never
be justified. A new booklet prepared by the bishops entitled 'End of
Life Care - Ethical and Pastoral Issues' was launched yesterday by
Bishop Donal Murray of Limerick. While acknowledging that the "best
possible care" in the last days and hours of life may entail making a
patient as comfortable as possible rather than "dramatic intervention"
to prolong life, the bishops affirm that it can never be right to
intend death, either by action or omission. In a pastoral letter
published with the booklet, the bishops stress the need for effective
palliative care, which "quite apart from any question of morality ...
should mean there is no need for euthanasia". [Irish Independent, 8
October]
A Scottish woman who had an abortion by RU-486 and then found her
aborted unborn child in a jar is planning to sue the hospital where the
abortion took place. Nicola McManus, aged 27, who already had three
children, was shocked to find her foetus in a jar labelled with her
name while she was speaking to her husband over the telephone at the
hospital in Glasgow's Stobhill hospital. Mrs McManus has also described
how she lay in a hospital ward for hours waiting for the drug regimen
to take effect, and how she felt intense pain when it did. The North
Glasgow NHS Trust has apologised to her for the "obvious distress"
caused. [
Daily Record, 8 October]
Canada's justice minister has pre-empted debate on embryonic stem cell
research in the Canadian House of Commons by assuring researchers that
the practice would be allowed. Anne McLellan said that it would be
"inappropriate to shut down the potential that might exist within
embryonic stem cell research". [
LifeSite, 7 October]
Delegates at the British Conservative party's annual national
conference have warmly applauded SPUC's Peter Smith for his comments on
parental rights and the provision of abortifacient morning-after pills
in schools. Mr Smith made a brief intervention in the conference hall
yesterday in which he urged legislation to ensure that girls under 16
could not be given abortifacients or contraceptives without the consent
of their parents. At a breakfast meeting this morning, Peter Smith met
with Iain Duncan Smith, the Conservative party leader, who said that he
agreed with the intervention. [SPUC, 8 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