News, 28 March 2003
A member of Guernsey's parliament who supports the legalisation of
doctor-assisted dying has described the slow progress of an official
investigation into the matter as "absolutely disgraceful". Members of
the parliament voted by 38 to 17 in favour of launching an
investigation into assisted suicide six months ago, but the president
of the committee charged with organising the investigation has admitted
that the working party still has no chairman and has not even met.
Deputy Pat Mellor said that he was appalled by the delay and claimed
that it demonstrated the lack of seriousness with which the matter was
being addressed. Campaigners for doctor-assisted dying have sent
postcards to every household on the island asking for support.
[Guernsey Press and Star, 27 March; see
digest for 14 March] Guernsey is an autonomous British protectorate in the English channel 20 miles off the coast of France.
The Canadian government may attempt to overturn a House of Commons
amendment to its bill on assisted human reproduction intended to ensure
a total prohibition on human cloning, according to "reliable sources".
LifeSite, a Canadian pro-life news resource, has heard that the Liberal
government might seek to have the amendment, which prohibits cloning by
"any technique", overturned in the Senate, where it has a reliable
majority. It is also reported that the third reading and final vote in
the House of Commons on the bill, which authorises destructive research
on human embryos, will now take place next Wednesday. [
LifeSite, 27 March]
The Jesuits in the United States have issued a statement to explain and
affirm their "renewed stance in defence of human life". A document
entitled "Standing for the Unborn" released this week by the 10 US
provincials of the Society of Jesus seeks to "underscore the
correctness of Catholic Church teaching regarding abortion". The
document describes abortion as "a key social evil" which has cost more
than 39 million American lives since 1973, and affirms that the Jesuits
are compelled to speak out against "a spirit of callous disregard for
life" which shows itself directly in abortion but also in other evils
such as violence and discrimination. [
CNS and
US Jesuits' document, 25 March]
A number of Irish pro-life groups are seeking clarification of the
grounds for two abortions performed on Irish teenagers in Britain and
paid for by the Irish state over the past year. Two area health boards
have admitted paying for girls in their care to have abortions in
Britain [see
digest for 17 March]
but no further information has been provided. Pat Buckley, director of
the European Life Network in Ireland, said: "We are not seeking to
identify the girls in question, but we are extremely concerned that
Irish taxpayers' money has been used to pay for these two girls to have
abortions across the Irish Sea. We wonder why there appears to be a
veil of secrecy over the grounds for these abortions, when the supreme
court has only allowed abortions in cases of threatened suicide. Every
abortion is a tragedy for all concerned." [ELN, 28 March]
The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), the
world's largest abortion promoter, has launched what it calls a "Safe
Motherhood Appeal" to coincide with Mother's Day in the UK on 30 March.
IPPF is asking for donations for the work of its affiliated family
planning associations, many of which provide abortions, in developing
countries. The campaign is being fronted by Claire Rayner, a
pro-abortionist and a famous British agony aunt. [
IPPF News, 20 March; SPUC]
The Catholic archbishop of Sydney has welcomed news that a grant of
50,000 Australian dollars made available by his archdiocese to support
ethical adult stem cell research has been taken up. Archbishop George
Pell, the leading Catholic prelate in Australia, congratulated
Professor Alan Mackay-Sim of Griffith University for winning the grant,
which will be used to research the potential of stem cells extracted
from the inner lining of a patient's own nose to treat Parkinson's
disease. [Archdiocese of Sydney, 25 March] Adult stem cell technology
constitutes an ethical and consistently more promising alternative to
the use of embryonic stem cells and to so-called therapeutic cloning.
The state senate of North Dakota has voted by 46 to zero in favour
of a law to ban the cloning of human beings for both reproductive and
research purposes. The US Congress is also considering a comprehensive
cloning ban. [
KXMC News, 27 March]
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