News, 19 November 2003
The European parliament will vote today on whether to lift a moratorium
on EU funding for embryo research, BBC reports. Member states are
divided over the issue, with Belgium and the UK permitting embryonic
stem cell research and Germany and Spain banning it, and the vote is
expected to be close. [
BBC, 19 November]
In a press release issued yesterday, Dana Rosemary Scallon the Irish
MEP warned that the Irish government had 'given the green light' for
the use of Irish taxpayers' money to fund embryo research in spite of
public opposition. Ms Scallon stated: "This government support of the
EU Commission is both unconstitutional and totally unethical."
A bill is being considered in Singapore to ban reproductive human
cloning, The Scotsman reports. The bill will also require scientists to
seek health ministry approval before using human stem cells. [
The Scotsman, 18 November]
Scientists in Kenya have sparked angry protests from religious groups
after their work on IVF reached the press. The three scientists, Dr
Okello Agina, Dr Leah Kirumba and Dr A. Kibwana, are working on a
project to achieve low cost IVF treatment, a project that has been
condemned by Catholic, Protestant and Muslim leaders. [
All Africa, 17 November]
A pro-abortion teacher who lost her job at a Catholic school in
Delaware is to sue the school, claiming their actions were illegal.
Michele Curay-Cramer, who claims to be a bona fide Catholic, was fired
after putting her name to a pro-abortion advertisement. The diocese of
Wilmington stated: "The Constitution guarantees every religious
institution the right to practice and uphold the teachings of its
faith, and the diocese and bishops strongly support the right of every
Catholic school to ensure that its faculty members teach and uphold the
doctrine of the Catholic faith." [
CWNews, 18 November]
IVF treatment could increase the risk of human chimeras, according to a
report in the Telegraph. Human chimeras are people made up of two
genetically distinct individuals fused together in early pregnancy.
Though extremely rare, they may be becoming more common because of IVF.
Microchimerism, where women carry the cells of their children and vice
versa, is already thought to be very common, with up to 50% of women
harbouring their children's cells decades after birth. [
The Telegraph, 13 November]
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