News, 9 January 2003
The European Commission has called for an international ban on human
cloning, but only for reproductive purposes. Philippe Busquin, the EU's
commissioner for research, declared yesterday that "reproductive
cloning must be condemned not only for obvious ethical reasons and
common values, but also because it is about an utterly irresponsible
practice from the scientific point of view." [
Reuters, via Yahoo News, 8 January]
The European parliament has described attempts to distinguish between
reproductive and therapeutic cloning as 'linguistic sleight of hand'
and voted only last November in favour of a comprehensive cloning ban.
Prominent members of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest
protestant denomination in the US, have urged Christians to promote "a
culture of life in the midst of the culture of death". A magazine
published by the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Kentucky
features articles on abortion, euthanasia and cloning by figures
including R Albert Mohler Jr, president of the seminary, and Richard
Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention's ethics and
religious liberty commission. Dr Land wrote: "Christians, in
particular, have an obligation to confront these critical moral and
ethical issues with a scriptural response. These are hard questions,
but God's Word gives the simple but indisputable answer: Human life
from conception onward should be protected, not endangered." The
publication marks the 30th anniversary later this month of the US
supreme court's Roe v Wade decision which declared a constitutional
right to abortion. [
BP News, 8 January]
Legislation to ban human cloning for all purposes has been
re-introduced in the US Congress by a bipartisan coalition of
legislators. A comprehensive cloning ban was passed in the House of
Representatives last year, but was never taken up by the
Democrat-controlled Senate. The new bill has been introduced in the
House of Representatives by Dave Weldon, a Republican, and Bart Stupak,
a Democrat, and already has 87 co-sponsors - including 20 Democrats.
Senator Sam Brownback is expected to introduce a similar bill in the
Senate, which now has a Republican majority, and the legislation is
thought to have a good chance of success. [AP and Pro-Life Infonet, 8
January]
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