News, 4 April 2003
An inquest in Northampton, England, has returned a verdict of
accidental death in the case of a Moldovan asylum seeker who died last
May as a result of a botched abortion. Valentina Barladean, aged 29,
was told by doctors that her unborn child had a malformed skeleton and
would be born severely disabled. When she and her husband then had
their UK asylum application rejected, she decided to go ahead with an
abortion. However, she later sustained serious brain damage as a result
of complications arising from the presence of her dead foetus inside
her womb for four days. 11 days after that, her life support machine
was turned off. Her family are now considering legal action against
those responsible for her treatment. [
Northampton Chronicle, 4 April]
Switzerland's official statistics agency has lost count of the number
of surplus human embryos kept in storage and available for destructive
research. The Swiss Federal Statistics Office is obliged under the law
on 'reproductive medicine' passed in 2001 to keep data on the number of
frozen IVF embryos, but has admitted failing to do so. Swiss
researchers want to know the number and location of surplus embryos for
their destructive research programmes because the importation of
embryos into Switzerland is banned and patent rulings put them at a
disadvantage when experimenting on imported stem cell lines. It is
reported that surplus embryos stored before the 2001 law came into
effect will have to be destroyed by the end of the year after the
federal senate rejected a government proposal to extend this deadline. [
swissinfo, 3 April]
Campaigners for doctor-assisted dying in Guernsey are claiming strong
support for their cause. Ann Crocker, who founded an action group which
recently sent postcards to many households on the island seeking
support for assisted dying [see
digest for 14 March],
claims that she has received about 2,000 responses. Last month Mrs
Crocker organised a meeting which was attended by nine people. Angela
Meadowcroft, chairperson of the locally-based Channel Islands Right to
Life, said: "The campaigners for assisted dying may be vocal, but
pro-life people in Guernsey are determined to do all we can to resist
this initiative." [Guernsey Press, 3 April (and 12 March); SPUC, 4
April]
As expected, the Vatican has published a lexicon of anti-life and anti-family euphemisms [see digests for
12 December 2002 and
23 January 2003].
The 868-page document has been produced by the Pontifical Council for
the Family (PCF) and is initially available only in Italian. Cardinal
Alfonso López Trujillo, president of the PCF, explained that the 78
phrases and expressions contained in the lexicon were often used in
parliaments and at international meetings in a way which hid their real
content and significance. They include "emergency contraception" -
which in fact refers to abortifacients - and "reproductive rights" -
which is taken to include a so-called right to abortion without any
respect for the rights of unborn children. [
CNS, 3 April; SPUC]
The Catholic Church in New York State has condemned a bill passed by
the state assembly which would authorise the creation of cloned human
embryos for research purposes. The language of the bill, as passed,
would technically allow the gestation of cloned embryos for up to nine
months because the only prohibition is on the birth of cloned babies.
Richard E Barnes, executive director of New York State Catholic
Conference, said: "This bill is a moral outrage, made worse by the
deceptive nature of the arguments in its favour. The sponsors are
calling it a 'cloning ban', but in fact the exact opposite is true." [
LifeSite, 3 April]
The makers of the Swedish version of the 'Big Brother' television
programme have issued contestants with supplies of the abortifacient
morning-after pill as well as condoms and pregnancy testing kits. Big
Brother, which has versions in many different countries, is a popular
game-show in which a group of people are locked away in a house and
have their every move monitored by television cameras. [
Ananova, 4 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