News, 29 April 2003
The British prime minister has reaffirmed his personal support for
destructive research on human embryos. In an article for the Wall
Street Journal to mark the 50th anniversary of the discovery of the
structure of DNA, Tony Blair observed that there were "very
understandable ethical concerns about the use of human embryonic stem
cells in research" but insisted that "we cannot afford to overlook the
potential these cells hold for treating chronic, incurable diseases".
Mr Blair said that there needed "to be a genuine dialogue between the
public, scientists and governments around the world to explore these
issues and to generate a suitable environment for further research". [
Gulf Daily News, 26 April]
The UK has some of the most permissive embryo research regulations in
the world, and is the only Western country whose parliament has passed
legislation designed to sanction the creation and destruction of cloned
human embryos in medical research.
The results of a survey conducted by a British market research
company have suggested that teenagers are being dissuaded from buying
the abortifacient morning-after pill because it is too expensive. A
survey by Isis Research of 50 high street chemists across Britain found
that three in four pharmacists believed that the current £24 price was
prohibitive for the under-20s. [Daily Telegraph, 28 April] The
morning-after pill became available over-the-counter from pharmacists
to women over 16 throughout the UK on 1 January 2001, but evidence
suggests that it has done nothing to reduce the number of unplanned
pregnancies or registered abortions. Indeed, tens of thousands of
unborn babies have been killed before implantation as a result.
The lexicon of anti-life terminology recently published in Italian by
the Vatican contains a strong affirmation of the inviolability of human
life from the moment of conception. The document, prepared by the
Pontifical Council for the Family [see digests for
23 January and
4 April]
and soon to be released in English, contains one passage which has been
translated as: "No law in the world, no political system can ever make
abortion lawful nor the right to abortion, which is in itself
unlawful." The document also observes that any state which attacks the
right to life from the moment of conception until natural death "is not
democratic", and condemns so-called emergency contraception as a form
of abortion. [
LifeSite, 25 April;
The Tablet, 12 April]
President George W Bush has urged the US Congress to pass the Unborn
Victims of Violence Act this year. The bill would recognise an unborn
child who is injured or killed as a result of a federal crime as a
legal victim so that a second charge could be brought on his or her
behalf. Ali Fleischer, the White House press secretary, said: "The
President does believe that when an unborn child is injured or killed
during the commission of a crime of violence, the law should recognise
what most people immediately recognise, and that it that such a crime
has two victims." [
LifeSite, 28 April] The law would not affect the current status quo with regard to abortion law.
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