Print

Print


By Any Name, Human Cloning Is Planned at Stanford

PALO ALTO, California, DEC. 15, 2002 HYPERLINK
"http://www.zenit.org/"(Zenit.org).- Wide skepticism has greeted
Stanford University's plans to produce stem cells for medical research
by means of what it called somatic cell nuclear transfer.

Dr. Irving Weissman, director of Stanford's Institute for Cancer/Stem
Cell Biology, was quoted in the Associated Press as saying that his
planned research is "not even close" to cloning. The university itself
also denied any link to cloning.

But those announcements seemed at odds with the American Association of
Medical Colleges, of which Stanford is a member.

The association equates somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) with
therapeutic cloning. It defines it as the "removing [of] the nucleus of
an unfertilized egg cell, replacing it with the material from the
nucleus of a 'somatic cell' (a skin, heart, or nerve cell, for example),
and stimulating this cell to begin dividing."

Asked at a news conference if nuclear transfer and cloning were the
same, Nobel laureate and Stanford professor Paul Berg had a two-word
response: "It is."

Berg's view was echoed by Father Joseph Howard of the American Bioethics
Advisory Commission (ABAC), a project of American Life League.

"Dr. Weissman's claim that somatic cell nuclear transfer is not human
cloning is simply false," said Father Howard. "It is immoral and an
outrage for a scientist of his stature to purposefully mislead the
public for his own personal agenda."

"Finding treatments and studying diseases is noble," the priest added,
"but not on the backs of human embryos, who are living human beings that
deserve to be protected by law."

Father Howard said that the recent development "makes it clear to us
that congressional action is needed to ban all human cloning. The ABAC
is committed to working with all members of the U.S. Congress to craft a
comprehensive bill to render illegal all forms of human cloning."

The Weekly Standard in its Dec. 23 issue also took Stanford to task for
deciding to go ahead with cloning.

It noted that the U.S. House of Representatives in July 2001 passed a
ban on all human cloning, including the procedure now proposed by
Stanford. It also noted that last July the President's Council on
Bioethics recommended a four-year moratorium on the production and use
of cloned human embryos for biomedical research.

"Stanford's announcement is important," the magazine said. "In a country
still weighing the significance and moral dangers of taking the first
steps toward human cloning, a major research university has decided to
plunge ahead. Stanford seems to believe that the question of whether to
harvest and exploit cloned human embryos -- and perhaps eventually
cloned human fetuses -- is one for scientists and internal university
review boards, not citizens and their democratic institutions."



---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.434 / Virus Database: 243 - Release Date: 12/25/2002


----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn