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Acknowledgment: Catholic World News Service | |||
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MELBOURNE, Australia (CWNews.com) - The Catholic
Archdiocese of Melbourne on Wednesday called for all people
to pray for each of the hundreds of frozen, unborn children
being destroyed at in vitro fertilization clinics under a
state law that went into effect on Monday.
Father Christopher Prowse, archdiocesan spokesman, called
the embryonic children "the most vulnerable of our brothers
and sisters" and added: "We in the Catholic Church say they
should be offered religious and human respect as they die."
He also called for prayer to end what is seen as a social
decline that has led to establishment of IVF clinics and
the destruction of embryos more than five years old.
Under the Infertility Treatment Act, 1995, the embryos are
to be removed from their liquid nitrogen baths and allowed
to stand at room temperature for at least 24 hours before
being disposed of. Under the legislation, the embryos were
to be destroyed starting on January 1, but a three-month
extension was granted for prospective parents to come forward.
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