News, 14 January 2003
Pope John Paul II condemned abortion and other attacks on the dignity
of human life during his annual address to the Vatican diplomatic corps
yesterday. In his 'state of the world' address to diplomats, the pope
said: "Abortion, euthanasia, human cloning, for example, risk reducing
the human person to a mere object: life and death to order, as it were!
When all moral criteria are removed, scientific research involving the
sources of life becomes a denial of the being and the dignity of the
person." He went on to say that choices needed to be made so that
humanity could still have a future, and that the first of these choices
was: "No to death! That is to say, no to all that attacks the
incomparable dignity of every human being, beginning with that of
unborn children." [
Newsday,
LifeSite and
Zenit, 13 January]
Legislation to ban human cloning only for reproductive purposes is
expected to be introduced in the US Senate before other senators are
able to introduce an alternative measure to secure a comprehensive
cloning ban. A bill to ban cloning for all purposes has already been
introduced in the House of Representatives, and it was thought that
similar legislation would be tabled in the Senate soon afterwards. [
FT, 14 January; see
digest for 9 January]
US Senator Joseph Lieberman has become the latest pro-abortion Democrat
to announce his intention to run for president next year. Senator
Lieberman, who was the Democrats' vice-presidential candidate in 2000,
is known as a staunch pro-abortionist and has voted three times against
a ban on partial birth abortions. It is reported that the four other
Democrat politicians who have so far put their names forward for the
Democrat presidential nomination are also pro-abortion. [
Pro-Life Infonet, 13 January]
Participants at a pro-euthanasia conference in California have given a
cool reception to suggestions by Dr Philip Nitschke that there may be a
case for offering euthanasia to those who are not terminally ill.
Addressing the conference of the pro-euthanasia Hemlock Society in San
Diego over the weekend, Dr Nitschke, the prominent Australian
campaigner for euthanasia, said that healthy elderly people who had
"made a rational decision to end their lives" should be "listened to".
However, he conceded afterwards that his comments had caused "some
discomfort", and Derek Humphry, the Hemlock Society's founder, insisted
that the Society did "not encourage any form of suicide for mental
health or emotional reasons". [
CNSNews, 14 January]
Two pregnant sisters from Qatar have been reunited with their Indian
husbands after their family allegedly tried to force them into having
abortions. The two sisters arrived with their brothers at Cairo airport
last week but then claimed asylum. It is reported that their brothers
had taken them to Egypt with the intention of procuring illegal
abortions because the family was against the sisters' marriages to
Indian men. Egyptian human rights lawyers worked with representatives
of the United Nations High Commission to protect the women on the basis
that they were being persecuted. [AP, 9 January; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
A prominent pro-life US senator has called for a firm defence of human
life in a letter to accept one of the Catholic diocese of Brooklyn's
annual pro-life awards. Senator Sam Brownback, a Republican who
represents Kansas, wrote: "We must unambiguously confront the threats
against human life, whether those threats emerge at the beginning of
life in the form of abortion, cloning or destructive embryonic
stem-cell research, or at the end of life in the form of euthanasia or
assisted suicide." [
Catholic News Service, 13 January]
Utah's supreme court has upheld a state law prohibiting so-called
wrongful birth lawsuits. The 1983 law protects doctors from being sued
by the parents of children with developmental anomalies on the basis
that the mother would have had an abortion if the doctor had diagnosed
the anomaly during pregnancy. The law was challenged in 1999 by a
couple who had a baby with Down's syndrome. [
EWTN News, 8 January]
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