News, 11 November 2003
The UN General Assembly's legal committee voted 80-79 in favour of
delaying a decision on a cloning ban for two years. James Cunningham
the US deputy ambassador to the UN, said that 100 nations supported a
total ban and that countries opposing the total ban had voted to delay
because they feared losing the argument. [
BBC, 6 November]
Hubert Hueppe, a high-ranking member of the German parliament, told the
Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute: "Today's German vote is in
irreconcilable contradiction to the German government's earlier
statements at the UN that the issue needed immediate action... Our
government has ignored parliament's unambiguous demand for a
comprehensive ban, expressed in a motion adopted by an overwhelming
majority." Another delegate stated that the UN's credibility was in
question if it could not ban "the creation of human beings for the
deliberate purpose of their destruction." [
C-Fam, 7 November]
The head of the intensive care unit where Vincent Humbert died is
expected to be charged with murder, The Age reports. Dr Frederic
Chaussoy said that he caused the death of Mr Humbert by switching off
his respirator, after an unsuccessful campaign by euthanasia supporters
to change the law. The prosecutor's statement said that his death "was
not the direct result of stopping the artificial respirator but of the
administration of (drugs) by the doctor." [
The Age, 7 November]
A New York judge has granted a request by the National Abortion
Federation to block enforcement of the partial birth abortion ban, BBC
reports. The law bans a form of abortion that involves the partial
delivery of the baby who is then killed. It includes an exception 'to
save the life of a mother' but supporters of the new law have pointed
out that partial birth abortion is never medically necessary. [
BBC, 6 November]
Life begins at 14 days, according to the Anglican Church in Australia.
Anglican primate Peter Carnley made the statement at the annual
scientific meeting of the Fertility Society of Australia in Perth. Once
this was understood, he claimed, 'troublesome difficulties fall away'
surrounding issues such as IVF and embryo research. [
The West Australian, 5 November]
Catholic Archbishop Barry Hickey challenged Dr Carnley, stating that
human beings must be treated with dignity from the moment of conception
to natural death. [
CathNews, 6 November]
A 'sex tsar' is to be appointed to deal with Scotland's high rate of
teenage pregnancy and STI. Scotland has one of the highest teenage
pregnancy rates in Europe, with rates of chlamydia infection rising by
30% last year. A spokesman for the Catholic Church in Scotland
commented: "This shows it is time to tackle behaviour and deal with
causes rather than symptoms. We would like this tsar to say to young
people that multiple casual sex relationships are a bad idea." [
The Telegraph, 10 November]
Archbishop Mario Conti called upon Scotland to take 'a long hard look
at abortion and allied issues' as they remembered those killed in war
this Remembrance Sunday. In an article published in the Sunday Herald,
he wrote: "While we recall with pride the lost generations sacrificed
in conflicts of the last century on this Remembrance Sunday, at the
same time we should recall - this time with shame - the silent
holocaust of Scotland's children, whose names will never appear on any
memorial, but whose loss will continue to be felt in the years ahead." [
The Sunday Herald, 9 November]
SPUC has launched two major publications in its campaign against the
draft Mental Incapacity Bill. Dr John Fleming, director of the Southern
Cross Bioethics Institute, has written a 12-page commentary on the
bill, which is accompanied by a four-page flier on the key dangers of
the bill. [
SPUC press release, 10 November]
The Northern Ireland division of SPUC has brought out a leaflet on
abortifacient birth control with the European Life Network of Dublin.
The leaflet details the abortifacient nature of a large number of drugs
and devices as well as the associated health risks. [
SPUC press release, 10 November]
Girls as young as 11 can obtain the morning after pill and sex
information at a Gloucestershire school. The scheme, which involves a
lunchtime drop-in clinic and received only one complaint from a parent
when it was piloted in April, was criticised by a spokesman for Life.
"To me this is nothing short of child abuse," said Aidan Murray. "It is
unjust and immoral. This attitude puts pressure on kids to have sex. It
tells children they can live without dealing with the consequences of
their actions." [
Gloucestershire Echo, 8 November]
The Chinese government is selling children to western couples seeking
to adopt, the Daily Mail reports. The Chinese Adoption Affairs bureau
holds 'adoption weekends' for couples from the West, during which
babies from orphanages, the majority of them girls, are brought to
hotels and handed to couples for a fee of approximately £2,500. The
growth of this adoption industry has been partly attributed to the
exposure of atrocities carried out by Chinese family planning officials
as part of the one-child policy, including forced abortion and killing
of new born babies. [The Daily Mail, 11 November]
Britain's main opposition party has announced changes to its shadow
cabinet. Iain Duncan-Smith, a pro-life Catholic, has been replaced as
leader of the opposition by Michael Howard, described by the media as a
Liberal Jew. Mr Howard has a mixed voting record on abortion and he
voted in favour of destructive research on cloned human embryos in
2000. In 1997 Mr Howard voted against a bill aimed at legalising
assisted suicide and in 2000 he voted for a bill aimed at prohibiting
euthanasia by omission. Mr Howard has appointed Tim Yeo as shadow
secretary of state for health. Mr Yeo has a generally pro-life voting
record on abortion but he voted in favour of destructive research on
cloned human embryos in 2000 and his position of euthanasia is unknown.
Other new appointments include John Bercow as shadow international
development secretary, who is believed to be sympathetic to the
pro-life lobby on abortion. Life-issue profiles of the new opposition
spokesmen for portfolios with pro-life relevance will be available soon
from SPUC. [
Conservative party website, 10 November; SPUC sources]
The UK Voluntary Euthanasia Society has used the tragic situation of
Tom Hurndall to launch a 'pro-choice Living Will'. Tom Hurndall, a
former peace activist, is in a permanent vegetative state after being
shot in the head by an Israeli soldier and doctors are applying to the
high court for permission to end his life support. In a press release
publicising the living will, the VES claims: "The High Court
application could have been avoided if Tom had made a pro-choice Living
Will." The pro-choice Living Will is supported by Philip Havers QC and
Mo Mowlam MP. [
VES, 3 November]
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