News, 10 July 2003
The EU Commission has approved guidelines allowing funding for research
on 'spare' IVF embryos. EU Research Commissioner Philippe Busquin
stated: "By setting strict ethical rules...for such funding, the EU
contributes in a responsible way to advancing this science for the
benefit of patients across the world, while at the same time ensuring
that it takes place within a clear ethical framework." However, the
guidelines have come under criticism from some quarters. "Europe must
reject this Commission proposal which seeks to fund research using
unborn human beings, whether that is as frozen embryos or as aborted
babies," stated Irish MEP Rosemary Scallon. [
Reuters, 9 July]
European bishops have joined with pro-life groups to condemn the EU
Commission's decision. Monsignor Noel Treanor, Secretary General of the
Commission of the Bishops' Conferences of the European Community
(COMECE) said: "we sincerely regret the European Commission's proposal
for guidelines on EU-funded human embryonic stem cell research. Such
research raises fundamental moral problems, because it involves the
destruction of human embryos." SPUC spokesman Anthony Ozimic commented:
"Destructive research on human embryos is banned in a number of EU
member states including Ireland, where such research is contrary to the
Constitution's protection of unborn children from conception onwards.
This means that taxpayers in those member states will be forced to pay
the EU to undermine their own laws and fund unethical research in
neighbouring countries...We call on EU member-states to defend their
sovereignty to protect the right to life from such liberal
interpretations of the Charter." [
Independent Catholic News, 9 July]
Pro-life fundraiser Fiona Pinto completed a parachute jump over
Cambridgeshire, England, last Sunday to raise money for the ProLife
Alliance. The PLA suffered heavy financial setbacks during the past
year when it lost its cases against cloning and censorship in the House
of Lords. "For someone who would run a mile from a rollercoaster, I
couldn't have done this without the encouragement of so many people who
rang up or emailed," she said. [
Independent Catholic News, 10 July]
A woman with a drug problem is appealing against a Michigan court
ruling obliging her to use birth control. Renee Gamez, whose two
children are in foster care, was arrested last December while driving
with drugs in her system and claims that birth control has failed and
caused her illness. "This judge is actually treating this woman as an
object, like chattel," said Kary Moss of the Michigan chapter of the
American Civil Liberties Union. The judge concerned, Lapeer County
Judge Michael Higgins, told Gamez during the case: "You're going to
stop having babies that you can't take care of. I consider that a much
greater danger to our society and your children than whether or not you
get sick, so get used to it, ma'am." [
Detroit Free Press, 9 July]
Doctors in Germany believe that they have made a major breakthrough
with in utero surgery after operating on three unborn babies with
suspected spina bifida. Surgeons in the US have pioneered in utero
surgery but it is a risky procedure involving opening the abdomen and
womb which can cause premature labour. However, the new technique
involved only tiny incisions into the womb and the insertion of tubes
and a camera. "All children operated on showed only slight symptoms of
lower limb paralysis after delivery," said Dr Thomas Kohl, who carried
out the operation. The BBC reports that there are 18 thousand people
with spina bifida in the UK and that 9 in 10 unborn babies diagnosed
with the condition are aborted. [
BBC,10 July]
A federal judge in Louisiana has blocked the issue of "Choose Life" car
number plates. US District Judge Standwood Duval ruled that Louisiana's
system for allowing the plates violates the First Amendment by not
offering pro-abortion plates. Louisiana has nearly 150 different
speciality plates on sale, supporting causes from conservation to the
Girl Scouts. William Rittenberg, attorney for the plaintiffs in the
case, noted that the ruling does not ban speciality plates but the way
in which the state authorises them. Attorney General Richard Leyoub
said the state would appeal against the decision. [
Telegram.com, 9 July]
An Oklahoma judge has rejected a murder charge for the killing of an
unborn child during the Oklahoma bombing in 1995. Terry Nichols,
suspected of conspiring in the attack is charged with 161 murders,
including a second charge of killing an unborn child. However, the
charge for the killing of Carrie Lenz's unborn son was dropped on
procedural grounds. Mrs Lenz's widower, Michael, testified before
Congress last year in favour of the Unborn Victims bill, describing the
ultrasound pictures that were taken of the baby the afternoon before
the bombing. He said that, though the official death toll was 168, "in
my mind, 171 people lost their lives that day." [
LifeNews.com, 9 July]
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