News, 9 September 2003
The Belgian Medical Journal has claimed that euthanasia cases are being
carried out unreported. Official figures record 170 cases of euthanasia
since it was legalised in September 2003 but it is claimed that two or
three times that number have occurred. [
Expatica.com, 2 September]
A report published by the Voluntary Euthanasia Society claims that
30% of people who help others to die go on to commit suicide
themselves. The report also claims that between 40% and 50% of doctors
have received a request for assisted suicide and that 55% of doctors
favour a change in the law. A Home Office spokeswoman stated: "Our law
needs to take into account the value of life and vulnerability of
individuals who are ill and in pain. That is why the law protects them.
We have no plans to change the law at present." [
Ananova, 9 September]
Washington researchers claim to have successfully treated diabetes in
rats with tissue taken from rat embryos, Reuters reports. The tissue
was used to create an entirely new insulin-producing pancreas, which
could theoretically lead to transgenic transplants or the use of human
embryonic stem cells in future juvenile diabetes treatments. [
Reuters, 8 September]
The court-appointed guardian of a comatose man at the centre of a
legal battle has decided to have the man's life ended. Jason Childress
has been in a coma since July and his family are divided over whether
he should live or die. Jason's father and stepmother claim that he has
managed to communicate to them through signs that he wishes to live,
but they have been told that they have no legal options open to them
and that the governor will not intervene. [
LifeNews.com, 9 September]
A Mexican teenager who became pregnant after rape in 1999 is
seeking compensation from the government for not being permitted an
abortion. The government gave her $10 000 to settle the matter after an
obstetrician refused to perform the procedure and she was persuaded by
doctors, social workers and a priest to keep the baby. Her case is
being used by women's groups who claim that the sum she received was
insufficient. They are also demanding legal action against those
individuals and institutions who prevented her from having an abortion.
[
Yahoo News, 4 September]
Further to our story last
Friday
on the acquittal of two pro-life activists in Wales, it has come to our
attention that the judge may have been inaccurately quoted in the
Guardian report. Local Welsh newspaper the South Wales Argus reported
the judge's words as: "The poster
could be seen as being in poor taste..." (SPUC emphasis) [
This is Gwent, 5 September]
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