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House Panel Passes Anti-Cloning Bill
By JANELLE CARTER
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP)--The House Judiciary Committee advanced
a bill Tuesday that would prohibit human cloning, following
a lengthy debate that also delved into stem cell research.

In passing the bill 18-11, lawmakers said they wanted to keep
scientists from applying the same technique on humans that
was used to clone Dolly the sheep in 1997. The measure now
goes before the full House.

Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson
praised the committee, saying its action puts Congress on the
right track toward prohibiting the cloning of human beings.

``Supporting medical research to combat human disease
and infirmity is immensely important to this administration,''
he said. ``However, science does not and cannot proceed
in a moral vacuum. The ethical issues posed by human cloning
and the implications for the child creates are particularly
troubling.''

But as the cloning bill has moved through the House,
a debate has arisen over stem cell research.

President Bush will soon decide whether to permit federal
funds for medical research on stem cells pulled from human
embryos. Just Monday, Pope John Paul II urged Bush
to reject the idea.

As the president has grappled with his decision, so have
lawmakers, including many staunch anti-abortion
Republicans. In recent weeks, some--like Sen. Orrin Hatch
of Utah--have announced their support for stem cell research.

Tuesday in the House, many Democrats voiced concern
that an outright ban on human cloning would also prohibit
stem cell and other types of research.

``This may be known as the point in the meeting this morning
when we try to play doctor and that's bad for American patients,''
said Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, the leading Democrat
on the committee. ``This would stop ongoing studies designed
to help people (that are) suffering.''

Republican members said action is needed before science
advances to the point where humans are cloned. They said
the bill only affects human cloning and does not restrict the use
of cloning technology to produce molecules, DNA, cells other
than human embryos, tissues, organs, plants or animals
other than humans.

Stem cells are building blocks for all human tissue. The most
versatile cells are derived from embryos discarded at fertility
clinics, but some abortion opponents say it is wrong to use
them for research.

Opponents of the bill argued that the use of cloning technology
to create embryos for research purposes should be allowed.

The Biotechnology Industry Association voiced its opposition
to the bill in a letter to committee members that stated,
``Cloning techniques in research are integral to the production
of breakthrough medicines, diagnostics and vaccines to treat
heart attacks, various cancers, Alzheimer's, diabetes, hepatitis
and other diseases.''

The cloning research could also produce replacement skin,
cartilage and bone tissue for burn and accident victims,
the industry said.

``In addition to shutting the door on important research,
(the bill) will limit patients' access to possibly life saving
products,'' the industry said.

For some, the debate became emotional. ``An embryo is
human life. It is not a speck of dust,'' said Rep. Henry Hyde,
an Illinois Republican and outspoken abortion foe.
``Is it appropriate to create human life in a petri dish and then
destroy that life to get at a cell? I say no.''

But Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, retorted,
``An embryo is a clump of a few cells. How can you say to
somebody who you could cure of a deadly disease 'we will
not cure you because you are less important than
a clump of cells.'''

Democrats tried unsuccessfully several times during the
hearing to offer amendments that would exempt research
techniques from the ban.

Meanwhile, the committee waded into another murky topic
by passing by a voice vote a bill that would ensure that
a fetus breathing when it leaves a mother's womb, even during
an abortion procedure, would be treated as a person under
federal law.

Nadler and other Democrats had initially opposed the measure,
saying it was an attempt to chip away at abortion rights
enshrined in Roe v. Wade. Tuesday, Nadler told the committee,
``Whatever concerns anyone may have had that this might
become some clever way to undermine the rights protected
under Roe v. Wade have, I think, been addressed. ... I have
little doubt that it will be passed without much controversy.''

The Senate has already attached the measure to patients'
rights legislation that passed earlier this month.

___

The Human Cloning Prohibition Act is H.R. 2505.

The Born-Alive Infants Protection Act is H.R. 2175.

On the Net:
The text of the bills can be found at
http://thomas.loc.gov

Judiciary Committee:
http://www.house.gov/judiciary/

AP-NY-07-24-01 2255EDT

SOURCE: The Waco Tribune / Associated Press
http://www.wacotrib.com/news/ap_story.html/Washington/AP.V3743.AP-Cloning-Abortio.html

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