News, 3 September 2004
A study by the Voluntary Euthanasia Society claims that half of those
surveyed would consider travelling abroad for assisted suicide if they
became terminally ill. The study was published as the VES handed over a
petition containing 80,000 signatures to a House of Lords committee
investigating euthanasia laws. A House of Lords Select Committee will
begin examining the Joffe Assisted Dying for the Terminally Ill Bill
next week. [
The Telegraph, 2 September]
The Guardian newspaper has run a feature detailing the work of the
Swiss Dignitas clinic in helping patients to kill themselves. [
The Guardian, 2 September]
Singapore has banned so-called 'reproductive' cloning but permitting
'therapeutic' cloning for research purposes, Reuters reports. Singapore
is a growing scientific centre with lax research rules and 15 biotech
companies pledging an investment of $1.8 billion into life sciences by
2010. Some 30 countries have laws regulating cloning with about half
banning all forms of human cloning. [
Reuters, 2 September]
Adult stem cell transplants could one day be used to grow new hair and
skin to treat baldness and burn victims, Yahoo News reports. Research
conducted at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the Rockefeller
University in New York found that stem cells taken from the hair
follicles of mice and then transplanted onto the backs of bald mice
resulted in the growth of new skin and hair. Elaine Fuchs, who led the
study said: "We've identified cells within skin that bear all the
characteristics of true stem cells - the ability for self-renewal and
the multipotency required to differentiate into all lineages of
epidermis and hair." [
Yahoo News, 3 September]
The Dutch Foreign Minister has asked for the Dutch abortion boat to be
allowed to enter Portuguese territorial waters and take Portuguese
women on board, Expatica reports. Portuguese naval vessels are
currently monitoring the area. Antonio Monteiro said that he would
discuss the issue with the Prime Minister. [
Expatica, 2 September]
Dr Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, the palliative care pioneer, has died at the
age of 78. Dr Kubler-Ross became famous after the publication of her
book 'On Death and Dying' based on her interviews with terminally ill
patients, promoting the development of hospices and palliative care
whilst opposing euthanasia. [
Economist, 2 September]
A Catholic priest has condemned plans by Marie Stopes International to
open an abortion facility next to a hostel for homeless families. Fr
Tom Connolly described the proposed facility as 'a house of death and
carnage' and has encouraged people to demonstrate outside it. A
spokeswoman for the ProLife Party described MSI's plans as 'extremely
cynical' because the area has a large student population and may be
financially lucrative. [
South Manchester Reporter, 3 September]
The Catholic bishops of Paraguay have denounced plans by the country's
Health Minister to allow the sale of the morning after pill. The
decision goes against Paraguay's laws which protect the unborn. [
Catholic World News, 2 September]
Sex selection is on the increase in Sydney, Australia, with couples
paying up to $13,000 to choose their child's sex at IVF clinics.
Professor Robert Jansen's clinic Sydney IVF does approximately 200 sex
selections a year, half for social reasons, whilst the IVF Australia
clinic plans to treble its capacity next year. Tony Abbott the Federal
Health minister has said that the New South Wales government should
consider banning sex selection. [Bioedge, 3 September]
US President George.W. Bush told American voters last night that
"Because a caring society will value its weakest members, we must make
a place for the unborn child." [
Bush-Cheney '04, 2 September]
Mr Bush was giving his acceptance speech at the Republican National
Convention in New York, where his pro-life comment received warm
applause from delegates. On Wednesday, Michael Reagan, the adopted son
of the late pro-life U.S. president Ronald Reagan, told the convention
delegates: "I consider myself the luckiest man in the world. My mother,
father and birth-mother were pro-life, and pro-adoption." [
2004 Republican National Convention, 1 September]
At a convention fringe meeting, Catholic politicians called upon their
colleagues to work for Mr Bush's re-election because of his support for
pro-life values [
The Guardian, 2 September]
Cardinal Egan, archbishop of New York, closed the convention with a
prayer that Americans will be "a people of justice who revere the
rights of others, and especially that precious right to live which
resides in children coming into this world and in the aged and infirm
departing from it." [
PR Newswire, 2 September]
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