News, 3 February 2003
It is reported that the Polish government's request for a protocol on
abortion in its European Union accession treaty has been flatly
rejected by the European Commission in Brussels. Poland was one of 10
countries which completed negotiations on EU accession treaties in
December, but last week the Polish government requested an additional
protocol to safeguard national sovereignty in the area of abortion
legislation amid concerns that the absence of such a protocol could
lead to a "No" vote in the upcoming referendum on Polish membership of
the EU [see
digest for 30 January].
A European Commission official is quoted as saying: "There is
absolutely no way the accession terms are being reopened. It just isn't
possible. It's a case of take it or leave it." [Warsaw Business
Journal, 3 February]
The French senate has passed a comprehensive ban on human cloning.
The legislation describes human cloning as a crime "against the human
species" and imposes a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison for
transgressors. The legislation will now move to the Assembly, the other
chamber of France's national legislature, and could become law by the
end of June. Some experts were disappointed that the legislation would
allow destructive research on non-cloned embryos to continue, a
sentiment shared by pro-life bodies such as SPUC, while pro-cloning
experts tried to claim that so-called therapeutic cloning should not be
classified as cloning at all. [
CNSNews, 31 January] All human cloning is reproductive insofar as a new and distinct human person is created in every case.
Pope John Paul II used his weekly Angelus address yesterday to warn
against the devaluing of human life by modern technology. Addressing
thousands of people in St Peter's Square in Rome, the Pope observed
that the Catholic Church in Italy was marking its annual Pro-Life Day
under the theme: "You cannot trade with life." The Pope went on to say
that a "certain commercial logic, allied to modern technology" was
taking advantage of the human desire to have children, even at any
cost, but insisted: "In reality, human life can never become an object:
from conception until natural death, the human being is the subject of
inviolable rights, before which freedom must be restricted." [
Zenit, 2 February]
A senior official at the Iranian health ministry has estimated that
nine percent of all pregnancies in the country end in secret, illegal
abortions. Hossein Malek Afzali, the deputy health minister, estimated
that 80,000 clandestine abortions took place in Iran each year, mostly
after illegal pre-marital or extra-marital sex. It has been reported
that municipal workers in the capital Tehran discover dozens of dead
babies and foetuses in waste dumps every month. [
AFP, via IranMania News, 3 February]
Unsubstantiated and inflated reports of illegal abortion rates are a
common ploy of pro-abortionists in their bid to persuade legislators
that legalisation is the only way to make safe an already common
procedure.
A nurse has been sentenced to 10 years in prison by a French court for
assisting or causing the deaths of six terminally ill patients.
Christine Malèvre originally claimed to have helped 30 sick patients to
die, but later confessed to involvement in only four deaths. Ms Malèvre
has been dubbed the French "Madonna of Euthanasia" and her case is said
to have rekindled the debate over euthanasia in France. However,
several of the victims' families have denied that their relatives asked
to die and have attacked the leniency of the sentence. A lawyer
representing the families of three victims said: "If Christine Malèvre
had been tried for killing seven people in good health, we'd be far
from 10 years and closer to life in prison." [
BBC News online, 31 January]
The supreme court of South Carolina has ruled that an unborn child who
could survive outside the womb is a legal person under state laws on
child abuse and neglect. The justices voted by three to two last week
to uphold the homicide conviction of Regina McKnight in 2001 for
killing her unborn child by smoking crack cocaine throughout pregnancy
[see
digest for 18 May 2001].
Two dissenting justices expressed concern that the woman's sentence of
12 years in prison was far more severe than sentences handed down to
women convicted of illegal late-term abortions. Pro-lifers, such as
Wendy Wright of Concerned Women for America, welcomed the implications
of the judgement for the rights of unborn children under the law. [
CNSNews, 3 February]
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