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Italian doctor leads team looking to clone first human
By Jeff Israely, Associated Press, 3/10/2001 01:24
ROME (AP)   Looking to shatter the taboo of human cloning, an
international research team has declared that nothing can stop the
creation of human beings by the kind of methods that produced the
cloned sheep, Dolly.

''The genie is out of the bottle,'' said Panos Zavos, a reproduction
researcher who resigned earlier this month from his longtime post
at the University of Kentucky to help lead the human cloning effort.

''Dolly is here, and we are next.''

In the United States, the Food and Drug Administration has said
it has control over any human cloning research and that at this
point it would not permit it.

At a cloning conference Friday, the atmosphere was raucous and
sometimes circus-like. The narrow Rome hospital lecture hall was
crammed with rival researchers, skeptical local doctors and a swarm
of international news media.

Severino Antinori, an Italian gynecologist who boasted in January
that a human would be cloned within a year, used the Rome
conference to try to shift the focus of human cloning from ethical
questions and fears of diabolical manipulation to the quiet desires
of infertile couples.

''Cloning creates ordinary children,'' claimed Antinori, who was
already well known for pushing the limits of reproductive
assistance. They will be ''unique individuals, not photocopies of
individuals.''

While his fellow scientists from the United States, Austria,
Italy and Israel outlined their areas of expertise, Antinori
repeatedly shouted down visiting researchers and reporters
who raised objections to the prospect of human cloning.

Toward the end of the four-hour gathering, a young medical
researcher read a statement from Ermelando Cosmi, one of the
two directors of gynecology at Umberto I Polyclinic, objecting
to a human cloning conference being held at the public hospital.

''They use the word 'create,' they talk about sacrificing embryos,''
said Nathan Ogbonna, a 34-year-old Polyclinic gynecologist from
Nigeria, echoing his colleagues' doubts after the conference.

''Now anything that you are able to do is considered permissible.
Not for me.''

Clones are made from a single adult cell joined with an egg
cell, the genes of which have been removed.

Researchers trying to clone animals have reported that many of
their attempts have ended in disaster, with monster-like creations
and repeated premature deaths.

Dolly, the British sheep created by cloning in 1997, came after
the artificial production of 29 embryos, though just a single
pregnancy.

Zavos said that for ethical reasons the human effort will not
use ''an animal model.''

After announcing in January that 10 infertile couples wanted to
be part of the human project, the team said it has been flooded
by others seeking to have children through cloning.

''They come to us and they don't call you names, they don't cuss
you, they don't say you're unethical,'' Zavos said. ''They said,
`Help me.'''

The American researcher said some 600 to 700 couples with
fertility problems in the United States, Japan, Argentina, Britain
and elsewhere want to take part in the cloning efforts.

Single women, couples who want to have another child after the
death of other offspring, and childless couples advanced in years
have all been ruled out as candidates.

Zavos would not say who is financing the research team's effort,
where it will take place or what other scientists are taking part
in the research. He said the team has ''unlimited funding'' from
private sources and that ''we don't want the government in this
project.''

http://www.boston.com/dailynews/069/world/Italian_doctor_leads_team
_look:.shtml

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