News, 1 September 2004
The Inter Academy Panel, an umbrella organisation for national science
academies, has asked members to back a UN ban on so-called reproductive
cloning that would permit cloning for research purposes. Professor
Richard Gardner, chair of the Royal Society, said: "For countries that
have not yet brought in a ban, a UN convention which draws a clear
distinction between reproductive cloning and therapeutic cloning will
provide invaluable guidance in passing effective legislation." [
The Telegraph, 30 August]
The maverick fertility specialist Panayiotis Zavos has been criticised
for claiming that his team has experimented with cloning embryos using
cells taken from the dead. Richard Gardner of the UK Royal Society's
working group of stem cell research and cloning said: "It is grossly
misleading to suggest that you can replicate a loved one by producing a
cloned person with the same genetic material." [
News Scientist, 31 August]
American Life League has launched a Deadly Dozen advertisement,
identifying politicians who claim to be Catholic but support abortion.
The ad includes figures such as John Kerry and Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Judie Brown, ALL's president said: "No matter your political
identification, you can't be both Catholic and pro-abortion." [
MichNews, 31 August]
A leading scientist has described embryonic stem cell research as
'uncivilised and barbaric' and said that its potential 'has been
greatly oversold.' Professor Martin Clynes, head of the Department of
Biotechnology at Dublin City University criticised the Irish
government's decision last year to support EU funding of embryo
research, saying that the government should reject research that
involves the destruction of human embryos. [
The Belfast Telegraph, 31 August]
An article in a Bristol newspaper has drawn attention to an often
forgotten factor in the rise in teenage pregnancy rates - the desire of
teenagers to get pregnant. A doctor describes being approached by
teenagers requesting IVF treatment after 'years of trying', blaming the
need of some young people to have children early on low self-esteem and
low aspirations. [
This is Bristol, 1 September]
Parents whose son was stillborn as a result of alleged medical
negligence have been told by the Texas Supreme Court that they cannot
sue for damages. The court ruled to uphold a legal definition that a
child is only a person when it starts breathing. Justice Steven W.
Smith, the only dissenter, argued that the unborn should be entitled to
legal protection. [
Catholic World News, 31 August]
A study reported in the scientific journal Nature has cast a disturbing
light on the varied practices of IVF clinics on embryo disposal. Some
clinics freeze 'spare' embryos indefinitely, others give them a
funeral, some are donated for research, whilst others are simply
incinerated. Only 3% of clinics questioned avoided creating surplus
embryos, whilst only 16% refused to destroy them. The majority handed
them to research institutions. Richard Kennedy of the British Fertility
Society said: "The use of human embryos is a very sensitive area. They
do represent a life. So it is important to have a regulatory framework
in place that gives people clear guidelines." [
Nature, 23 August]
Alison Davis, co-ordinator of the disability rights group No Less Human
commented: "It is not enough to say, as the British Fertility Society
do, that embryos "represent" a life. Each individual embryo is a human
individual, with the same right to life as any other member of the
human race. Every human being, including embryos, deserves to be
treated with respect, and accorded their inherent right to life. It is
not compatible with these rights for embryos to be created only to be
kept in suspended animation, experimented upon, or destroyed in other
ways. It is not possible to adequately "regulate" the creation of human
embryos in this way. It should be banned." [SPUC source]
The Church of Scotland has backed plans for pre-school sex
education, the Scottish Herald reports. David Alexander of the Kirk's
education committee said that 'relationship education' was essential to
protect children from abuse. [
The Scottish Herald, 1 September] Cardinal O'Brien described the new sexual health strategy as 'state-sponsored sexual abuse' of children. [
The Guardian, 30 August]
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