A Catholic prelate has told politicians to examine their consciences over how they voted on the British government's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill. Preaching at Mass in the Westminster parliament-building, Cardinal Keith O'Brien, Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh, reminded MPs of their duty to protect the common good. He said: "... the vast majority of politicians have given support to various attacks on human life with apparent lack of reproach from conscience." [Telegraph, 5 June]
The Catholic Bishop of Lancaster, England, has lamented the cheapening of human life. Rt Rev Patrick O'Donoghue said: "Every embryonic human person is a wonder of creation, who possesses the inherent right to realise his or her potential for creativity, love, self-sacrifice, and joy." There was no evidence that animal-human embryos could be of any therapeutic use. Cures for diseases should not be sought "at the cost of de-personalising the unborn and treating them as things to be manipulated and dissected." [Lancaster Guardian, 2 June, and SPUC director's blog, 26 May]
A retired Anglican bishop who was a member of the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority has dismissed the idea that every human embryo has a soul, speaking instead of "primitive embryonic material". Rt Rev Lord Harries of Pentregarth called opposition to human-animal hybrids absurd and pointed out that they would only live for 14 days. Such experiments were "for an over-ridingly good purpose" such as curing serious illness. [Daily Mail, 4 June]
A body
entrusted with impartially explaining the European Union's Lisbon treaty has said that it does not
threaten Ireland's abortion-law. Mr Justice Iarfhlaith O'Neill, president of the Referendum Commission, said a
protocol protecting the constitutional right to life was of the same legal
status as an article of the treaty. [Irish
Examiner, 5 June] When asked about the meaning of the removal of Ireland's veto over what the treaty calls
"arrangements for the control of
implementing powers" Mr O'Neill demurred. [Irish
Examiner, 5 June] Patrick Buckley of European Life Network, Dublin, said: "This is an ominous
development when the person who is responsible for providing impartial
information is either unable or unwilling to answer it. It does not augur well
for the future that there are aspects of the treaty which are undefined.
Despite his denial on the abortion issue this hesitation raises major
questions." The popular vote on the treaty will be next week.
A member of
the Tony Blair Faith Foundation has reportedly compared pro-life
advocates to Saudi extremists. Mr Blair subsequently played down the remark by Dr
Richard Levin, president of Yale University, Connecticut.
[Washington
Post, 4 June] SPUC's John Smeaton has written about this incident and about
Mr Blair's support for abortion. [SPUC
director's blog, 4 June]
Old people are reportedly going to Mexico to buy pentobarbital to use for suicide. It is said that suicide-supporters publicise the whereabouts of veterinary pharmacies and pet-shops which sell Nembutal for putting down domestic animals. [Reuters, 4 June]
A British couple who are expecting naturally-conceived quads have refused so-called selective abortion. Mr Michael Wing, the father, is quoted as saying that such intervention could lead to the deaths of all the children. Mrs Emma Wing, of Devon, says she wants nature take its course. [BBC, 3 June] Selective abortion is intended to increase the survival chances of the babies who are not killed.
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