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Supreme Court of Brazil to Issue Opinion on the Personhood of Embryos
By Matthew Cullinan Hoffman
3/4/2008
LifeSiteNews (www.lifesitenews.com)
The dispute before the court regards the fifth article of the nation's
Biosecurity Law, which authorizes scientific experiments on embryonic stem
cells.Despite overwhelming Catholic majority, media predicts decision
against life

 BRASILIA (LifeSiteNews) - The Supreme Court of Brazil will issue a decision
on March 5th on the personhood of human embryos, and in the process will
determine if scientists will be permitted to kill them in the process of
medical research.

The dispute before the court regards the fifth article of the nation's
Biosecurity Law, which authorizes scientific experiments on embryonic stem
cells. Such research results in the deaths of countless human embryos, and,
unlike adult stem cell research, has not produced a single cure.

Although a majority of the jurists on the nation's Supreme Court regard
themselves as "Catholic", many observers believe that they will vote against
the personhood of human embryos and allow research that destroys them.

The current president of the National Conference of Brazilian Bishops
(CNBB), Geraldo Lyrio Rocha, warned in a press release that a decision that
allowed embryos to be destroyed would open the door to abortion, and
denounced the tactics used to promote the practice.

"To save one and kill another is not the answer," said Lyrio Rocha, adding
that "the Church doesn't agree with the manipulation of the feelings of
people and their desire to live, of their hope to find a cure, with
falsified information. It isn't only reprehensible, it is inhuman. We are
going to give correct and certain information, and not feed people's false
expectations."

Darcísio Perondi, a delegate to the national Chamber of Deputies, denies
that an abortion is occurring, because the embryos are never implanted in a
mother's womb. Rather, they are "discarded" after being created in a
laboratory. "Those embryos normally are discarded after three years and are
going to end up in the trash. It's preferable that they should be donated
for research, because they might result in treatments for many illnesses,"
he told Radio Progresso of Ijui.

Fr. Luiz Carlos Lodi da Cruz, a well-known Brazilian pro-life activist, says
that proponents of embryonic stem cell research consistently ignore the
issue of the humanity of the unborn.

"It's interesting to note that none of the speakers favoring the destruction
of embryos dared to say that they are not individual human beings," wrote
Lodi da Cruz recently in the online journal Media Without a Mask. "What's
more, they said that they 'don't know.' In a general way, they tried to say
that that question is unimportant from the perspective of curing
degenerative diseases through the use of embryonic stem cells."

"But as they were debating with high-caliber pro-life scientists, they
couldn't use the deceptive propaganda in the Supreme Court that they used in
the Chamber (of Deputies) or Senate. They were constrained to admit that up
to now no one has been cured with embryonic stem cell transplants, at the
same time that research with adult stem cells (that do not require the
destruction of embryos) had had great therapeutic success."

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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