News, 9 September 2002
The Pope has appealed to the British government to respect human life.
In an address to Kathryn Frances Colvin, the new British ambassador to
the Holy See, Pope John Paul II lamented attempts to legitimise
abortion, embryo experimentation and human cloning. He then insisted:
"Neither human life nor the human person can ever legitimately be
treated as an object to be manipulated or as a disposable commodity;
rather each human being - at every stage of existence, from conception
to natural death - is endowed by the Creator with a sublime dignity
that demands the greatest respect and vigilance on the part of
individuals, communities, nations and international bodies." [
Zenit, 8 September]
The UK is the only western country whose parliament has legislated to
authorise the creation and destruction of cloned human beings for
research purposes.
Pro-abortionists in the European parliament are trying to recover
the monopoly on European Union funding for women's organisations
previously enjoyed by the pro-abortion European Women's Lobby (EWL).
After a three-year campaign by pro-lifers, the European parliament
voted last year to end the EWL's monopoly [see
digest for 31 October 2001].
However, an amendment to the budget line on women's groups which will
be voted on by the parliament's pro-abortion women's rights committee
tomorrow aims to restrict access to money for women's organisations to
those whose activities are "in keeping with the Community equality
strategy" drawn up during the Beijing UN conference on women in 1995.
Euro-Fam reports that this is a blatant attempt effectively to
reinstate the EWL monopoly. [
Euro-Fam, 7 September]
Doctors from Britain, Spain and Belgium have developed a technique for
conducting keyhole surgery on unborn children to correct diaphragmatic
hernias, a condition which affects between one in 5,000 and 10,000
unborn children and can cause their death. Professor Kypros Nicolaides
from King's College, London, said that parents whose unborn babies had
the condition would have been told six months ago to consider an
abortion, but that now foetal surgery was the preferred option. Eight
babies have undergone the experimental procedure so far, six of whom
survived. Foetal keyhole surgery has been used to treat urinary tract
defects, and could be used to treat spina bifida in the future -
although it remains controversial due to the high risk of death for the
unborn child. [
Reuters, via Yahoo! News, 9 September]
The Catholic bishops of Germany have stressed the need to protect
unborn life in their guidance for voters in the federal parliamentary
elections to be held on 22 September. Among other issues, the bishops
told Catholics that the weakest, especially the unborn, had to be
protected. They also condemned experimentation on human embryos. [
Zenit, 6 September]
A new technique developed by US scientists to measure foetal brainwaves
could help doctors to protect babies from damage sustained in the womb.
Electrical impulses in the brain create small electrical fields, and
researchers at the University of Arkansas have used
magnetoencephalography (MEG) to monitor slight fluctuations in these
magnetic fields in the brains of unborn children between 28 and 36
weeks into pregnancy. It is thought that doctors could employ the
technique to identify those babies at risk of brain damage caused by a
lack of nutrients from the placenta late in pregnancy. [
BBC News online, 6 September] Brainwaves have been identified in unborn children as early as the sixth week of pregnancy.
The governor of California has signed three pro-abortion bills into
law. The measures signed by Governor Gray Davis protect the privacy of
abortion clinic workers and patients, oblige more hospitals and doctors
to provide or undergo abortion training, and require rape crisis
centres to give out the abortifacient morning-after pill. Two other
bills in the legislative pipeline in California would legalise the
creation and destruction of cloned human embryos for research purposes
and allow experimentation on live human embryos provided they are not
allowed to survive. [
LifeSite, 6 September]
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