News, 21 August 2003
The professor whose team at King's College London created the UK's
first stem cell line from IVF embryos, has defended the work as "wholly
ethical" on the grounds that the embryos would otherwise have been
discarded. Professor Peter Braude stated: "The UK stem cell bank is an
idea worth supporting as it will allow maximum research by use of as
few embryos as possible." The stem cell lines, created by Dr Stephen
Minger and Dr Susan Pickering, are to be stored at Cancer Research UK's
laboratory in South Mimms. [
This is Hertfordshire, 20 August]
An interview with one of the survivors of Dr Mengele's experiments is
to be broadcast on BBC radio this evening. Zoe Polanska Palmer spent
two years in Auschwitz being force-fed tablets and pills by SS doctors
as part of what are believed to have been early birth control tests.
The treatment left her physically and psychologically damaged and
unable to have children. Now in her seventies, Mrs Polanska Palmer has
been fighting for compensation and an apology from the German
pharmaceutical company Bayer. [
BBC, 20 August]
Bishop-elect and SPUC president, Professor Anthony Fisher OP,
debated against euthanasia advocate Dr Philip Nitschke before a packed
hall at the University of Sydney last week. [
The Catholic Weekly, 24 August]
The Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer has criticised members of
Congress for producing a misleading report that denies the existence of
a link between abortion and breast cancer. In March 2002, the National
Cancer Institute website publicised allegations of report bias in
studies showing a link, which was removed under the direction of the
Health and Human Services Secretary. Karen Malec of the Coalition
stated: "They're running scared because science isn't on their side.
Scientists can't disprove the biological explanation for an ABC link,
and five medical organisations recognise a causal relationship." [
LifeNews.com, 19 August]
A new study entitled UNICEF: Women or Children First? has exposed the
gradual change in UNICEF's focus from child survival to abortion
promotion. UNICEF has taken part in the formulation of UN documents
with other UN agencies that promote abortion and financially supports
the South African NGO LoveLife which provides abortion information to a
largely underage audience. In 1996, the Vatican withdrew its annual
contribution to the agency when officials came to believe that UNICEF
supported abortion. C-FAM is calling for a campaign to bring UNICEF
back to its central mission of child survival. [
CWNews/Culture and Life Foundation, 19 August]
The September issue of Glamour magazine has published an article
detailing a new approach to abortion marketing being adopted by some US
abortionists. The new method involves using the language more commonly
found in counselling for post abortion syndrome and rituals including a
kind of baptism of the aborted baby. Before the abortion, women are
encouraged to express guilt, to write notes to their children about
their feelings of empowerment, to grieve and express love for the
child. A spokesman for Campaign Life Catholic, condemned the strategy.
"This is the most diabolical twist to the abortion industry so far. To
use and deform the conscience, even invoking God's forgiveness for
unrepented acts of murder, in order to sell their murderous service is
a horrific violation of the women who go to them in trust." [
CWNews, 20 August]
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