Dubai Telegraph - French inventor of abortion pill calls Wyoming ban 'scandalous'

EUR -
AED 4.294321
AFN 74.253619
ALL 95.872296
AMD 433.704387
ANG 2.092944
AOA 1073.434204
ARS 1639.383876
AUD 1.630848
AWG 2.107696
AZN 1.96015
BAM 1.954468
BBD 2.355421
BDT 143.521562
BGN 1.950542
BHD 0.441304
BIF 3478.721029
BMD 1.169318
BND 1.491883
BOB 8.111471
BRL 5.829991
BSD 1.169468
BTN 111.167228
BWP 15.875179
BYN 3.307945
BYR 22918.632663
BZD 2.352497
CAD 1.592787
CDF 2708.140315
CHF 0.916739
CLF 0.027102
CLP 1066.675183
CNY 7.986734
CNH 7.98829
COP 4361.123466
CRC 531.735296
CUC 1.169318
CUP 30.986927
CVE 110.675798
CZK 24.396662
DJF 207.811219
DKK 7.472054
DOP 69.685287
DZD 154.832962
EGP 62.591601
ERN 17.53977
ETB 183.67067
FJD 2.57057
FKP 0.860877
GBP 0.864065
GEL 3.139597
GGP 0.860877
GHS 13.090504
GIP 0.860877
GMD 85.913622
GNF 10263.693503
GTQ 8.938111
GYD 244.683224
HKD 9.159616
HNL 31.138853
HRK 7.534738
HTG 153.054918
HUF 365.043672
IDR 20334.381433
ILS 3.442466
IMP 0.860877
INR 111.388823
IQD 1531.806571
IRR 1537653.160541
ISK 143.404954
JEP 0.860877
JMD 184.244419
JOD 0.829086
JPY 183.83781
KES 151.051793
KGS 102.222361
KHR 4691.303387
KMF 491.721159
KPW 1052.386191
KRW 1728.533127
KWD 0.360173
KYD 0.974736
KZT 542.540205
LAK 25681.144292
LBP 104538.465789
LKR 373.722075
LRD 214.716016
LSL 19.680048
LTL 3.452693
LVL 0.707309
LYD 7.407627
MAD 10.812674
MDL 20.136275
MGA 4858.516457
MKD 61.637266
MMK 2455.275164
MNT 4182.27105
MOP 9.437268
MRU 46.71434
MUR 54.676984
MVR 18.071781
MWK 2036.313487
MXN 20.481189
MYR 4.632873
MZN 74.731036
NAD 19.679919
NGN 1603.05293
NIO 42.937367
NOK 10.845132
NPR 177.865485
NZD 1.991121
OMR 0.449603
PAB 1.169703
PEN 4.099639
PGK 5.066072
PHP 72.252128
PKR 325.947045
PLN 4.258832
PYG 7271.044057
QAR 4.259828
RON 5.192473
RSD 117.386687
RUB 87.698649
RWF 1707.788929
SAR 4.387509
SBD 9.384792
SCR 16.054895
SDG 702.171763
SEK 10.866352
SGD 1.492989
SHP 0.873014
SLE 28.824094
SLL 24520.009172
SOS 668.263928
SRD 43.797951
STD 24202.521612
STN 24.731076
SVC 10.23498
SYP 129.238853
SZL 19.67902
THB 38.271563
TJS 10.948537
TMT 4.09846
TND 3.374069
TOP 2.815437
TRY 52.872586
TTD 7.944585
TWD 37.040504
TZS 3034.379932
UAH 51.538272
UGX 4389.126281
USD 1.169318
UYU 47.107891
UZS 14029.47757
VES 571.729555
VND 30799.251277
VUV 138.890167
WST 3.174919
XAF 655.510204
XAG 0.016054
XAU 0.000258
XCD 3.16014
XCG 2.108163
XDR 0.813413
XOF 653.066113
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.028522
ZAR 19.63192
ZMK 10525.262602
ZMW 21.903071
ZWL 376.519917
  • RBGPF

    0.5000

    63.1

    +0.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.25

    -0.13%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    16

    -1.88%

  • NGG

    -0.9800

    87.5

    -1.12%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    23.93

    -0.13%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    16.05

    -0.62%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.87

    -0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.7100

    50.9

    -1.39%

  • RIO

    -1.9500

    98.63

    -1.98%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    36.36

    +0.03%

  • AZN

    -1.2800

    183.46

    -0.7%

  • BTI

    -0.3600

    58.35

    -0.62%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.93

    -0.39%

  • BCC

    -3.8000

    74.33

    -5.11%

  • BP

    0.5300

    46.94

    +1.13%

French inventor of abortion pill calls Wyoming ban 'scandalous'
French inventor of abortion pill calls Wyoming ban 'scandalous' / Photo: JOEL SAGET - AFP

French inventor of abortion pill calls Wyoming ban 'scandalous'

French scientist Etienne-Emile Baulieu, known as the father of the abortion pill, said it was "scandalous" and "a setback for women's freedom" that the US state of Wyoming has banned the drug.

Text size:

Baulieu, who at the age of 96 is still working on treatments for depression and Alzheimer's, did not mince his words about the ban.

"It is a setback for women's freedom, particularly for those in the most precarious position who do not have the means to go to another state" to get an abortion, he told AFP in an interview.

Last week Wyoming became the first US state to outlaw the use of the abortion pill.

It was the latest point marked for conservative anti-abortion activists in the United States after the Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to the procedure last year, leaving the policy to individual states.

Baulieu said he had dedicated a large part of his life to "increasing the freedom of women," and the ban was a step in the opposite direction.

Born in Strasbourg in 1926 to Jewish parents, Baulieu was raised by his feminist mother after his father, a doctor, died when he was a boy. At the age of 15, Baulieu joined the French resistance against Nazi occupation.

He went on to become a self-described "doctor who does science," specialising in the field of steroid hormones.

Invited to work in the United States, Baulieu was noticed in 1961 by Gregory Pincus, known as the father of the contraceptive pill, who convinced him to focus on sex hormones.

Back in France, Baulieu designed a way to block the effect of the hormone progesterone, which is essential for the egg to implant in the uterus after fertilisation.

"I wanted to make a contragestive," which stops gestation, he told AFP.

Partnering with the French Roussel-Uclaf laboratory, the oral drug RU-486, also known as mifepristone, was developed in 1982, providing a safe and inexpensive alternative to surgical abortion.

But there was a long battle for the drug to become authorised in the United States, where anti-abortion activists dubbed it the "death pill".

- 'Fanaticism and ignorance' -

In early March, French President Emmanuel Macron praised Baulieu's resilience when he presented the scientist with the Grand-Croix de la Legion d'Honneur, the top rank in France's honours system.

"You, a Jew and a resistance fighter, you were overwhelmed with the most atrocious insults and even compared to Nazi scientists," Macron said.

"But you held on, for the love of freedom and science."

Baulieu's wife Simone Harari Baulieu, a media producer in France, said "adversity slides off him like water off a duck's back".

She added that the recent "step backwards" in the United States was propelled by "fanaticism and ignorance".

Even at age 96, Baulieu heads into his office at the Kremlin-Bicetre University Hospital in the southern suburbs of Paris three times a week.

Stacks of photos, diplomas and binders contain "the work of a lifetime," the scientist said, adding that he still wants to "be useful".

His latest award is pinned to his blue suit, but Baulieu said he "never seriously hoped to receive such honours".

"It was a pleasure, but what interests me is improving people's health."

- 'Driving force' -

The team in his lab are continuing research he began years ago aiming to prevent the development of Alzheimer's disease, as well as treatment for severe depression, for which clinical trials begin in the coming months.

Baulieu said "there is no reason we cannot find treatments" for both illnesses, which have stubbornly evaded many previous attempts.

Julien Giustiniani, the team leader at the Baulieu Institute, which was created to finance research into dementia, said Baulieu was "always enthusiastic".

"He is a driving force for us," Giustiniani said.

Though Baulieu now uses a cane to walk, he exudes a tireless energy.

He partly credits using DHEA, a natural hormone produced by the adrenal gland, which Baulieu first described in the 1960s and has been touted as an anti-ageing supplement.

The causes that have dominated his life were "women, brain health and longevity," Baulieu said.

"I would be bored if I did not work anymore," he added.

A.El-Nayady--DT