News, 31 March 2003
Destructive embryonic stem cell research in Britain may be restricted
or even banned by the European Union, according to one of the country's
most influential research administrators. Dr Mike Dexter, who has just
retired as director of the Wellcome Trust - the UK's largest research
charity - said that future directives and funding decisions emanating
from Brussels could regulate embryonic research so tightly that it
would become impracticable. Dr Dexter, whose organisation has awarded
grants worth £5.5 million for embryonic stem cell research, blamed the
hostility in Europe to such projects on "religious views" and claimed
that the British attitude was "more perceptive and thoughtful" than
elsewhere in Europe. The UK has the most liberal legislation in the
world on stem cell research and experimental cloning. [The Times, 29
March] Many European countries oppose destructive research on embryos,
but the European Commission is known to support it.
A group which represents Catholic doctors across Latin America is
launching a campaign to increase awareness of the anti-life nature of
in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and the morning-after pill. Dr Francisco
Díaz Herrera, president of the Latin American Federation of Catholic
Medical Associations, warned that "death itself [wa]s beginning to be
institutionalised" as issues such as the right to life from conception
until natural death were being questioned as if they were simply a
matter of opinion. [
Zenit, 28 March]
Abortion is outlawed completely or tightly restricted in every Latin
American country except Cuba and US-controlled Puerto Rico.
The British government has announced that it will support a
private members bill introduced in the House of Commons to allow IVF
children to have their biological father named on their birth
certificate even if he died before they were created. The Human
Fertilisation and Embryology (Deceased Fathers) Bill, tabled by Labour
backbench MP Stephen McCabe, is intended to close a loophole in the law
highlighted by Diane Blood who was allowed by the courts to conceive
IVF children with the sperm of her dead husband. The bill received
cross-party backing when it was debated by MPs on Friday. [ePolitix, 28
March]
Figures released by Canada's official statistics agency on Friday
indicated that 105,427 unborn children were killed in registered
abortions in 2000, 0.2% fewer than in 1999. The abortion rate of 15.4
abortions per 1,000 women aged 15 to 44 was the same as in 1999,
although the number of induced abortions for every 100 live births
increased to 32.2 from 31.3 in 1999. The abortion rate increased in
every province except Ontario, Manitoba and British Columbia. The
statistics do not include chemical abortions procured by RU-486 during
the current testing phase, or early abortions resulting from use of the
morning-after pill or abortifacient methods of regular birth control.
Jim Hughes, national president of Campaign Life Coalition, commented:
"Statistics are cold numbers but each one of these precious babies
before birth were human beings who were systematically dismembered by
doctors in procedures paid for by the taxpayers." [
LifeSite and
The Daily from Statistics Canada, 28 March]
A Christian interest group within Britain's opposition Conservative
party has unveiled a policy proposal to ensure fully informed abortion
consent. At a meeting organised by the Conservative Christian
Fellowship in Glasgow, two Conservative party members presented a paper
which recommends a change in the law to require women who request an
abortion to be informed of the alternatives, the physical and emotional
risks and the exact nature of the procedure. Women would also be given
an ultrasound scan so that they could see their unborn child before
deciding whether to proceed, and a waiting period of 48 hours would be
mandatory to give women time to reflect on their decision. The writers
of the document hope that the policy will be acceptable even to those
who support access to abortion. There will now be a consultation
process before the draft policy is proposed to the Conservative party
leadership. [CCF, 31 March]
The creator of Dolly the sheep, the world's first adult cloned
mammal, has given his strongest warning yet about the dangers of human
cloning. Professor Ian Wilmut said that there was "increasing direct
evidence" that the cloning process led to the activation of certain
genes at the wrong stages of development, and that any attempt to clone
humans for reproductive purposes would result in late abortions,
stillbirths and babies with very short life-spans. Dolly was put down
earlier this year after developing a serious lung disease. [
Scotland on Sunday, 30 March]
The inherent flaws and dangers of the cloning process not only cast
doubt on the viability of reproductive cloning but also on the safety
and feasibility of so-called therapeutic cloning.
The Green Party in England and Wales has issued a statement which
notes that women can suffer psychological as well as medical
complications after an abortion. The statement quotes Martyn
Shrewsbury, the party's spokesman on health and social services, who
works as a psychotherapist in Wales and has first-hand experience of
the "depression, numbness, loss and guilt" suffered by many women after
they have an abortion. The statement calls on the government "to take
action as the abortion rate continues to rise" and recommends more
accessible contraception and better sex education in schools to reduce
the number of abortions. [
Green Party, 31 March]
There is no evidence that increased provision of contraception reduces
the abortion rate, and many forms of so-called contraception,
especially 'emergency contraception', can cause early abortions. The
Green Party has no representation in the UK parliament but does have
two members of the European parliament.
Pope John Paul II has reminded Catholic bishops that they are "the
first ones called to be untiring teachers of the Gospel of Life". In
his address to Indonesian bishops on their five-yearly Ad Limina visit
to the Vatican, the Pope quoted from his 1995 encyclical 'Evangelium
Vitae' on life issues by warning of a true "conspiracy against life"
appearing in many forms, including abortion, and insisted that "the
Church's prophetic voice must loudly proclaim the need to respect the
divine law written on every heart". [
Zenit, 30 March]
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