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EUROPE | 21.07.2006
 Germany Calls for EU-Wide Ban on Stem Cell Research
Stem cell research receives a fraction of science funding but much attention

 Germany put pressure on a number of European countries to reject a proposal
that would make EU money available for stem-cell research before a crucial
vote on science funding takes place Monday.
Although stem cell research amounts to only a small portion of the bloc's 51
billion euro ($64.3 billion) science budget for 2007 to 2013, it is a highly
controversial topic among the bloc's ministers and likely to be subject to a
heated debate during an EU science and research ministers' meeting on Monday.

"The European Union science program should not be used to give financial
incentives to kill embryos," German Research Minister Annette Schavan wrote
in a letter to the Finish EU presidency on Thursday, according to Reuters.
"The current proposal from the European Commission and the European
Parliament does not rule this out."

Germany -- along with Austria, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Lithuania
Luxembourg and Malta -- are against the notion that the bloc should provide
money for projects in some countries if the same research is prohibited in
other member states.

Who should decide on EU standards
 Most Europeans approve of stem cell research
European Research Commissioner Janez Potocnik, however, said research funding
should not be determined by nations at the extremes, but by the bloc's
majority.

"Relying on the ethical standards of either the most restrictive or the most
liberal countries would simply be against the principles of the EU," he said.

A May Eurobarometer survey showed 59 percent of Europeans approved of
embryonic stem cell research, providing there is some government oversight of
the projects.

Laws on stem cell research vary across Europe with the United Kingdom
encouraging it, and Germany enforcing a near total ban. This week US
President George W. Bush also vetoed a bill that would have permitted more
embryonic stem cells research in the United States.

Finland proposes research limits

Supporters of the research say the projects could help in the search for cures
to diseases including Parkinson's and Alzheimer's by taking advantage of
cells that would otherwise be discarded by fertility clinics. Critics,
including the Christian churches, call the use of the cells unethical because
it involves destroying human life.

Nearly all the EU's research funding is tied to the 2007-2013 budget Nearly
all the EU's research funding is tied to the 2007-2013 budget
Diplomats in Brussels said they expected Germany to try to win largely Roman
Catholic Italy over to their argument and gain enough votes to block a Finish
draft that places limits on the types of research allowed.

Finland, who currently hold the rotating EU presidency, presented a proposal
that allows funding for research on human stem cells but prohibits money
being given to projects dealing with human reproductive cloning, human
genetic modification and the creation of human embryos for scientific
research.

Impasse could endanger all EU science funding

If the ministers fail to agree on a compromise during the Monday meeting the
European Parliament would not be left with enough time to hold a second
budgetary debate. 'That could keep other projects from receiving funding next
year, according to Antonia Mochan, the European Commission's spokeswoman for
science and research.

The EU had a similar dispute on genetic research before it adopted its current
science funding package for 2000-2006. The discussion at that time produced a
system of a case-by-case analysis that required the approval of several
national and EU committees before awarding funds.

DW staff (sms)

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