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UN Committee Split Over Treaty to Ban Human Cloning
Peter Heinlein - United Nations
06 Nov 2003, 21:25 UTC

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The U.S. drive to enact a broad global ban on human cloning has suffered a severe setback at the United Nations. The
cloning issue has deeply divided the world body.

By a 80-79 vote, the General Assembly's legal committee passed a motion to delay consideration of a treaty banning
human cloning until 2005. The motion was sponsored by Iran on behalf of the 57-nation Organization of Islamic
Conference.

The vote effectively derails a U.S.-led campaign to draft a treaty that would prohibit all forms of human cloning,
including medical research on stem cells.

It also reveals a deep split within the world body on the cloning issue.

The U.S. and Costa Rican proposal calling for drafting an anti-cloning treaty had nearly 50 co-sponsors, and was
expected to pass easily. But it is fiercely opposed by many in the scientific community, who argue there is a need for
therapeutic cloning for research and medical purposes.

A rival resolution sponsored by Belgium and supported by Britain, France, and Germany, among others, would have banned
only the cloning of babies.

After the vote, Deputy U.S. Representative James Cunningham said he was disappointed that countries opposing a total
ban had used a technicality to derail the will of a majority of the international community.

"It is particularly regrettable that it was by only one vote that we will be prevented from formally registering that
more than 100 members of the Untied Nations favor the pursuit of the goal, of a total ban on human cloning," he said.

The vote effectively puts off for two years any work on drafting an international treaty banning human cloning.

Several European diplomats regretted that the vote leaves the issue of cloning in limbo. But as one Belgian diplomat
told reporters afterward, it may be better not to push forward on drafting a comprehensive treaty at a time when the
world, and even the scientific community, is so deeply divided on the question.

SOURCE: Voice of America
http://tinyurl.com/tztu

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