News, 2 April 2003
European Catholic bishops have urged the European Union not to fund
destructive research on human embryos. The Commission of the Bishops of
the European Community (COMECE) issued a statement at the conclusion of
its Spring plenary meeting in Brussels dealing with various topics of
concern, including the EU's multi-million euro Sixth Framework
Programme for Research. At present there is a moratorium on EU funding
of destructive research under this programme, but a planned review of
ethical guidelines could open the way for funding of this type of
research to begin from the start of next year despite the fact that it
is banned in a number of current and prospective EU member countries.
The COMECE statement called on the EU to "respect the different ethical
approaches to research with human embryos and embryonic stem cells in
member states". [
COMECE, 28 March; SPUC, 2 April]
Researchers in Ohio have linked a substance used to make plastic
bottles with miscarriages and developmental anomalies such as Down's
syndrome. Scientists at Ohio's Case Western Reserve University found
that exposure to bisphenol caused abnormalities in the developing egg
cells of some female mice, and concluded that the same phenomenon could
occur in humans and cause chromosomal anomalies in unborn children.
They also found that plastic bottles leaked bisphenol to a greater
extent if they were old or washed often. [
The Scotsman, 2 April]
A US court has issued a temporary restraining order to prevent an
abortion from being performed on a teenager who wants to keep her
unborn child. The parents of a 16-year-old girl had booked her in to
have an abortion in Jackson, Mississippi, next Saturday, but the
teenager contacted lawyers at the American Family Association's Center
for Law and Policy in Tupelo who intervened to stop the abortion from
going ahead. A preliminary hearing on the matter will now be held in a
federal court next Monday. [
WLBT, 1 April]
Pro-life groups mounted a surprise lobby of the US Congress yesterday
in support of President Bush's policies against public funding of
abortion services overseas. More than 100 lobbyists from pro-life
women's and family groups planned to visit 165 members of the House of
Representatives as well as 55 senators to urge support for the
so-called Mexico City policy which prevents federal funding of any
group which either provides or promotes abortion abroad. The director
general of the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF),
which has reportedly been denied $18 million in grants, described the
policy as "a testament to the Bush administration's war against women".
However, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a congresswoman from Florida, said that
the lobbyists were fighting for "an issue of basic human rights". [
CNSNews, 2 April]
The president of a US-based group that promotes population control
around the world has linked terrorism with overpopulation in a
fundraising letter. Werner Fornos, president of the Population
Institute, condemned the withholding of $34 million in US funding from
the pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and observed:
"It's no wonder that we, the richest nation in the world, for whom $34
million is a relatively small portion of the federal budget, have
people who hate us." John Cusey, executive director of the
Congressional Pro-life Caucus, described the letter as "extremely
offensive and outrageous". [SPUC, 2 April]
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