News, 25 February 2003
All medical staff who participated in the abortion of a pregnant
nine-year-old in Nicaragua last week, as well as the girl's parents who
requested the abortion, have been excommunicated from the Catholic
Church. The excommunication was confirmed by the top education official
of the archdiocese of Managua yesterday after Cardinal Miguel Obando y
Bravo, archbishop of Managua and head of the Nicaraguan bishops'
conference, said on Sunday that all those involved in the abortion had
been excommunicated automatically under canon law. The nine-year-old
herself is said to be "stable" in hospital. [
EFE, via Northern Light, and
LifeSite, 24 February]
Pope John Paul II has insisted that the integrity and dignity of every
human being must be protected "at any stage of his development". In his
address to participants at the ninth general assembly of the Pontifical
Council for Life in Rome, the Pope urged scientists to avoid "every
form of instrumentalisation or destruction of the human being".
Strongly condemning experimentation on embryos, the Pope declared: "I
am convinced that it is not permitted to anyone, much less so the
Church, to be silent in the face of certain achievements or pretensions
of experimentation with man." [
Zenit, 24 February]
The US Supreme Court has upheld restrictions on abortion in Indiana
which are said to be the strictest in the country. The justices turned
down an appeal by abortion clinics against a state law passed eight
years ago laying down certain conditions which must be met before an
abortion can proceed. These include an 18-hour waiting period and the
requirement for personal counselling during which a woman who has
requested an abortion is presented with information on the risks of
abortion as well as pictures of what her unborn baby may look like.
Pro-abortionists described the judgement as "outrageous", but Mike
Fichter of Indiana Right to Life warmly welcomed the conclusion of the
long legal battle. The state law will now finally come into effect. [
The Seattle Times, 25 February]
Hundreds of heart attack victims in a number of European countries are
to participate in a major trial to determine whether a patient's own
stem cells can be used to restore cardiac function. Professor John
Martin, head of cardiovascular science at University College, London,
explained that half of the patients would receive infusions of stem
cells extracted from their own bone marrow, while the other half would
act as a control group. [
Reuters, 24 February]
The therapeutic use of adult stem cells is an ethical and more
promising alternative to the use of embryonic stem cells and so-called
therapeutic cloning.
A prominent health expert in Russia has said that more has to be
done to "stop the epidemic of abortions" in his country. Vladimir
Serov, chief gynaecologist at the Russian health ministry, said that
abortion was one of the primary causes of infertility in a country
desperate to increase its plummeting birth rate. About 13 percent of
all Russian couples are unable to have children, and abortion
complications are implicated in as many as three out of four cases. It
is reported that Russia's abortion rate declined by 45 percent between
1992 and 2001, but there are still about 1.7 abortions for every live
birth. [
Washington Post, 22 February]
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