News, 8 May 2003
The European Union has set up a unit to monitor pro-life organisations.
Mr Poul Nielson, the EU's aid commissioner, has referred to well-funded
American groups which he says have extreme views on religion and
sexuality.
Mrs Dana Rosemary Scallon, the Irish pro-life member of the European
parliament, is leading opposition to the unit.
She is questioning whether the commission can legally use EU taxpayers'
money to fund such a unit and says it compromises the commission's
impartiality.
She has asked for details of the unit's scope, budget and staffing, and
suggests that its funding would be better spent on more deserving
causes.
Mrs Scallon was a signatory to a letter to Mr Nielson which sought
clarification of his allocation of €32 million to organisations which
promote abortion in developing countries.
56 other MEPs signed the letter, including Dr Ingo Friedrich,
vice-president of the parliament, Mr José Maria Gil-Robles Gil-Delgado,
former president of the parliament, Mr Francesco Fiori, vice-chairman
of the European People's Party, and Messrs Brian Crowley, Liam Hyland
and Sean O'Neachtain of Ireland's Fianna Fáil party. The letter pointed
out that support for the promotion of abortion in the EU and outside it
conflicted with EU treaties.
[Irish Examiner, 6 May, and Mrs Scallon's office, 8 May]
Peter Smith, SPUC's representative at the European Parliament, said: "I
am a British taxpayer working for a voluntary organisation. It is
galling in the extreme to know that my taxes, some of which are used to
fund the commission, will go to employing people whose job could be to
refute the good-quality material which I give to MEPs on matters such
as abortion. Not only do pro-abortion non-governmental organisations
get EU funding, but EU money is now also going to this attempt to
thwart our good work in defence of mothers and their unborn children.
However, in the end, the truth will out."
Male couples could have babies if techniques using mouse embryos
can be also used with humans.
Scientists in America and Japan found they could generate both eggs and
sperm from cloned embryos.
It is suggested that the resulting gametes could be used to create IVF
embryos which would be implanted in females.
Female couples could not use the technique because they cannot provide
Y chromosomes needed to produce sperm.
Mouse eggs created through meiosis at Pennsylvania university
proliferated easily.
At Toyko's life sciences institute researchers developed male mouse
germ cells which, when placed in testicular tissue, also underwent
meiosis and appeared to become sperm.
[
The Herald, 8 May, and
New Scientist, 7 May]
A state agency in Florida has asked a court to appoint a guardian for
an unborn child.
The foetus is of six months' gestation and his or her disabled
22-year-old mother is also to have a guardian appointed.
It is reported that the child is a result of rape. The woman's
disability means she cannot give consent to the removal of fluid from
the womb for DNA testing.
The request for guardianship in Orange county has come from Florida's
department of children and families.
[
AP via Orlando Sentinel on Gainesville Sun, 7 May]
A London-based chain of clinics has been criticised for offering free
IVF to women who will donate their eggs for other people's fertility
treatment.
Josephine Quintavalle of Comment on Reproductive Ethics accused the
Cromwell IVF & Fertility Centre of taking advantage of poor people.
The centre has clinics in parts of south Wales and north-east England
where there is social deprivation.
Women who donate eggs waive their rights over any babies resulting from
the recipients' treatment.
Several European countries forbid egg donation.
The Cromwell centre's Dr Kamal Ahuja predicts that the practice will
continue to grow in Britain and claims that it cuts wastage of eggs at
IVF clinics.
[
Reuters on Yahoo! and
This is London, 8 May]
Africa's first cloned mammal has been produced in the form of a cow.
The female calf is said to have been created in South Africa with ear tissue from a cow which gives a record yield of milk.
It is now seven years since British scientists created the first cloned mammal, a sheep which died prematurely in February.
One of the South African scientists conceded that cloned animals had a low survival rate.
[
AP on CNN, 7 May]
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