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Germany Seeks to "Regulate" Therapeutic Cloning, Not to Ban It
By C-FAM
Sep 26, 2003, 00:01

On the eve of renewed debate on human cloning at UN headquarters, the German government has announced that it will
continue to push for only a partial ban on human cloning, despite its own parliament's call for the government to work
with the United States and other countries that seek a ban on all forms of human cloning.

In an interview this week with the German-based Catholic News Agency (KNA), Kerstin Mueller, Foreign Office State
Minister, signaled her government's intention to seek an international ban on reproductive cloning, while merely to
"regulate" therapeutic cloning, the type of cloning in which human embryos are created in order to be used and
destroyed in medical research. In this effort, Mueller said the German government will "build a bridge to countries
that already perform research in the field of therapeutic cloning," such as the United Kingdom, China, Israel and
Singapore.

Mueller claims that the German government would like a comprehensive ban, but practical political considerations
require compromise. "What good will a [comprehensive] convention be that perhaps finds a small majority, but is not
supported by states that perform cloning research?" Mueller said.

Mueller also criticized the efforts of the United States at the UN, saying "We have tried to win support from the US,
too, for our approach that wants to build bridges at the UN level. Up to now this has not been successful, regrettably.
Personally I find it inconsistent, after all, that Washington on the one hand pursues an all-or-nothing strategy at the
international level, but on the other hand has not strict national ban. In Germany the legal situation is clear."

Last February, the German government's own position at the UN was questioned by an overwhelming majority of the German
parliament. In a parliamentary motion supported by all three of the prominent German political parties, including the
governing Social Democrats, the parliament wondered why the German government would work towards an international
convention on cloning that was much weaker than its own strict laws protecting human embryos from all forms of
scientific research. The motion stated that any form of human cloning, regardless of its goal, constituted an assault
on human dignity.

Mueller's most recent statements on cloning were immediately challenged by an influential member of parliament, who
disagrees with the government's position on both practical and ethical grounds. Hubert Hueppe, a Christian Democrat and
the vice chairman of the parliamentary study committee on bioethics, responded to Mueller by saying that "regulation"
of therapeutic cloning will have no practical outcome, since the countries that have already approved of this form of
experimentation on humans will not accept any substantive limitations on the procedure. Also, Hueppe emphasized that,
since the parliament has already established that all cloning runs counter to human dignity, no amount of regulation
will change the fact that cloning humans for medical research still undermines human dignity.

Copyright - C-FAM (Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute).

Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
Website: http://www.c-fam.org

SOURCE: MichNews.com / C-FAM
http://bigjweb.com/artman/publish/printer_1145.shtml

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