News, 18 February 2003
Pregnant women in Britain have been advised to limit their consumption
of tuna and avoid certain other types of fish altogether to protect the
health of their unborn children. The UK's Food Standards Agency has
warned that amounts of mercury found in tuna, shark, swordfish and
marlin could harm an unborn child's developing nervous system. Women
who are pregnant or breastfeeding, or who are planning to become
pregnant, are advised to eat no more than two medium-sized cans of tuna
each week, and to avoid the other specified fish entirely. [
FSA and
BBC News online, 17 February]
A British expert in law and bioethics has argued in a national
newspaper that the IVF industry is based on a "misguided central
premise" that the end of fertility treatment justifies the means. Dr
Jacqueline Laing of the London Metropolitan University highlighted the
use of IVF to help post-menopausal women to conceive as an example of
how the "baby making trade" ignored the interests of IVF babies and the
respect due to early human life. Dr Laing argued that, as a result of
the flawed reasoning behind the view that those who wanted children
should have the right to have them, "human life in its earliest stages
is mass-produced, frozen, experimented on and subject to quality
control and destruction." [Daily Mail, 18 February] The vast majority
of human beings engendered through IVF die before birth.
The government of Vietnam has approved a ban on human cloning for
all purposes. A decree approved by the Vietnamese government, which
will come into effect on 1 May, also prohibits the sex selection of
embryos and the donation of sperm, eggs or embryos for fertility
treatment. However, the decree on reproductive technologies does allow
the practice of IVF treatment to continue. [
Radio Australia News, 16 February]
Political analysts in Canada believe that consideration of the assisted
reproduction bill currently before parliament will be put on hold until
the second half of next month to allow time for the budget to be
debated. Pro-lifers have urged their supporters to take advantage of
the delay to lobby members of parliament further. The legislation as it
currently stands would permit the creation of human embryos for the
purposes of experimentation. [
LifeSite, 17 February; see
digest for 29 January]
The leader of the Catholic Church in Uganda has urged women to fight
vices including abortion and euthanasia. Speaking at a girls' boarding
college in Nabbingo, Cardinal Emmanuel Wamala of Kampala warned of the
threats posed by various false doctrines on a number of fronts,
including "through contraceptives, abortion and euthanasia under the
cover of scientific development and economic progress". [
AllAfrica.com, 17 February; via Northern Light] Cardinal Wamala is a staunch defender of human life - see digests for
26 January 2001 and
18 April 2001.
The Catholic deputy president of the Australian federal senate has said
that the Catholic Church should adopt "a more aggressive stance" on
moral issues like abortion and embryo research to give Catholic
politicians the courage to vote in accordance with their faith. Senator
John Hogg from Queensland told the Zenit news agency that there was "no
valid excuse" for politicians not to do the right thing, but that
particular difficulties were experienced by lapsed Catholics or those
"who had succumbed to the popular secular argument of the day" in the
face of so-called Catholic organisations that were "diametrically
opposed to the stated Catholic view and make the politician's stance
difficult to defend". [
Zenit, 17 February]
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