News, 1 December 2003
French lawmakers have approved an amendment that grants the unborn
child protection from death caused by negligence or recklessness.
Gisele Halimi, a women's rights lawyer, condemned the amendment,
claiming that the lawmakers were "introducing into our law a new
concept that gives foetuses a legal personality." However, Jacque
Barrot, parliamentary leader of the ruling UMP party stated: "It is
regrettable that this amendment, which sets out to improve the remedy
of an injustice, should have provoked such a senseless quarrel." [
Yahoo News, 28 November]
Scientists from the UK biotech company TriStem claim that they have
discovered a way of turning white blood cells into a 'stem-cell-like
state', according to a report in Bioedge. The techniques, which could
be used to treat tissue damage caused by illness or accident, have been
published in a peer-review journal but scientists have asked for
further proof. [
Bioedge, 26 November]
Two people have been sentenced to death and many others jailed after
being convicted of baby smuggling by a Chinese court. The smuggling
network sold 118 babies, all but one of them girls, who were drugged
and carried across country in bags before being sold for up to £250.
China's one-child policy was cited as a major reason for the smuggling.
[
Reuters, 30 November]
Joanna Jepson has won the first stage in her attempt to bring a legal
challenge over an abortion carried out on a baby with cleft palate, BBC
reports. Rev. Jepson now has the High Court's permission to take the
West Mercia police to court for refusing to prosecute those
responsible. [
BBC, 1 December]
The head of the Catholic hierarchy's Committee on European Affairs has
called Portugal's compromise measure on EU funding for embryo research
ethically unacceptable but 'probably the best to be expected'
politically. The compromise would restrict EU funding to research on
existing stem cell lines rather than destroying human embryos for
research purposes. Bishop Joe Duffy also stated that Catholic hospitals
and agencies that do not perform abortions in the developing world
should not be excluded EU funding. [
Irish Independent, 29 November]
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