News, 7 July 2003
The Northern Ireland High Court has rejected the Family Planning
Association's judicial review on abortion, the BBC reports. The FPA
claimed that current abortion law in Northern Ireland is unclear and
wanted to force the Department of Health to issue guidelines to doctors
on when abortions could be legally carried out. However, Mr Justice
Brian Kerr found that the law was perfectly clear. Of the 8000 Northern
Ireland women to have travelled to mainland Britain over a five year
period, only four would have been eligible for an abortion in Northern
Ireland. [
BBC, 7 July]
SPUC were interveners in the case and have welcomed the judgement. "The
pro-abortion lobby, represented in this case by the Family Planning
Association, wants to make abortion widely available in Northern
Ireland and claims that the law here is unclear," said Betty Gibson,
chairman of SPUC Northern Ireland. "SPUC's case is that the law is
perfectly clear. The law on abortion in Northern Ireland gives
considerable protection to unborn children which is what the
overwhelming majority of people here want." [
SPUC press release, 7 July]
Dr James Watson, the Nobel Prize winner who co-discovered DNA, claims
that he would have aborted his epileptic son if genetic screening had
been available at the time. In an interview to The Age newspaper, he
expresses his support for screening out sick children and those with
inclinations towards homosexuality in pursuit of 'better children' and
compares Catholic Church opposition to embryonic stem cell research to
the persecution of Galileo. [
The Age, 6 July]
The Dutch Abortion ship run by Women on the Waves has left Polish
waters amid a storm of protest, The Telegraph reports. Polish
authorities refused the boat permission to enter harbour and fined them
when they entered illegally. Customs officials then sealed their stores
of abortion pills to prevent them from being distributed. Protestors
pursued the boat in a motorboat, a number of mice were released onboard
and at the dockside, demonstrators protested against the ship with
banners and flags. However, Dr Gomperts, who heads Women on the Waves,
said: "we have managed to put the abortion issue back on the political
agenda." [
The Telegraph, 7 July]
In an article printed in The Sunday Telegraph, the Cardinal of
England and Wales, Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, has attacked Parliament's
preoccupation with fox-hunting whilst the abuse of human life in its
earliest stages is largely ignored. "Is not the foetus, a human person,
more important to us than the fox?" he wrote, "When will we begin to
debate the ethics of the future of our species with anything like the
passion, and the thoroughness, that we debate the future of our foxes?"
Reflecting upon reports last week about the creation of hermaphrodite
embryos and the proposal to use the eggs of aborted baby girls in
fertility treatment, the Cardinal warned: "we had our wake-up call this
week. Dozing through to tomorrow's strange new world just isn't good
enough for the human race." [
The Sunday Telegraph, 6 July]
A report published in an Australian newspaper suggests that issues such
as human cloning and genetic technology are the biggest concerns for
the country, particularly within the 18-35 age category. Craig Cormick,
manager of public awareness for Biotechnology Australia indicated that
recent surveys showed that confidence in genetic technology was poor
among the public. "The debate is no longer about science," he said,
"the issues for the public are about consultation, regulation, choice
and the benefits to the consumer." [
The Age, 7 July]
The Peruvian government is promoting safe pregnancy and childbirth
rather than population control, according to LifeSite News. Prime
Minister Luis Solari and his Health Minister Fernando Carbone have been
accused of "pushing their conservative Roman Catholic philosophy by
promoting motherhood and cutting off free contraceptives and
birth-control information to the poor" in a Newsday report. Carbone has
defended the government's position. "We have used helicopters and
ambulances, all imaginable means to save lives," he said. "Our aim is
to guarantee a safe, secure pregnancy and birth." [
LifeSite News, 4 July]
Five frozen embryos stored at the Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast,
have become impossible to identify after their labelling tags were
broken. As a result, five couples are faced with the dilemma of how to
proceed, as consent cannot be given to use them if it is not known to
whom they belong. One couple involved have complained that they were
not informed about the risks. Dr David Boyle, a consultant
gynaecologist at the hospital concerned said: "these things do
occasionally happen and at the time we do our best in a sensitive way
to explain it to the couple and explain to them what their options are
at that point." He added that the hospital would discuss the situation
further with the couples concerned and support them in coming to terms
with the eventual outcome. [
BBC, 4 July]
A BBC panorama programme has exposed the poor regulation of some of
Britain's IVF clinics, particularly the failure by the HFEA to expose
Paul Fielding's deception of patients. He was jailed earlier in the
year for deceiving many of his patients into believing that he had
frozen their embryos. He even claimed that he was implanting embryos
when he was in fact 'implanting' salt water. In spite of his having no
success with frozen embryo transfers for three years, the HFEA failed
to act. [
BBC, 7 July]
The Making Decisions Alliance have come out in favour of the draft
Mental Incapacity Bill which would allow patients to appoint a third
party to make decisions for them if they become mentally incapacitated
through illness or accident. Among the organisations who form part of
the Making Decisions Alliance are Help the Aged, which supports the
withdrawal of food and fluids from PVS patients, Age Concern, which
supports this measure as well as voluntary euthanasia, and Mencap,
which has expressed concerns that allowing the withdrawal of
tube-feeding from patients contravenes the Europeans Convention on
Human Rights. [
The Times, 7 July, SPUC Source]
Scientists in Japan and the United States have discovered that
mutations of the GATA4 gene are the cause of a common congenital heart
defect. Congenital heart defects are the leading cause of death among
newborns and it is hoped that through the discovery, the problem could
be screened for and corrected before birth. "We cannot change the fact
that parents are going to pass along the mutation," said Dr Deepak
Srivastava of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, "but
we might be able to develop a way to keep the disease from occurring." [
Reuters, 6 July]
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