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Pastimes : Human Cloning -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TimF who wrote (3)1/30/2001 7:09:54 PM
From: Apex  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24
 
Tuesday, 30 January, 2001, 17:08 GMT
Cloned human planned
'by 2003'

Professor Panos Zavos: The world must "come to grips
with cloning"
By BBC News Online's Alex Kirby

A private consortium of scientists plans to
clone a human being within the next two
years.

The group says it will use the technique only
for helping infertile couples with no other
opportunity to become parents.

It says the technology
will resemble that used
to clone animals, and
will be made widely
available.

One member said the
group hoped to produce
the world's first baby clone within 12 to 24
months.

It was founded by an Italian physician, Dr
Severino Antinori, whose work includes trying
to help post-menopausal women to become
pregnant.

A spokesman for the group is Panos Zavos,
professor of reproductive physiology at the
University of Kentucky, US.

No alternative

He said it would "develop guidelines with which
the technology cannot be indiscriminately
applied for anybody who wants to clone
themselves".

As with animal cloning, he said, the technology
would involve injecting genetic material from
the father into the mother's egg, which would
then be implanted in her womb.

"The effort will be to
assist couples that
have no other
alternatives to
reproduce and want to
have their own
biological child, not
somebody else's eggs
or sperm", Professor
Zavos said.

He said he believed
human cloning was
achievable. It could at
first cost $50,000 or more, but he hoped that
could come down to around the cost of in vitro
fertilisation, about $10,000 to $20,000.

Professor Zavos said he was well aware of the
ethical dimensions of the project.

"The world has to come to grips [with the
fact] that the cloning technology is almost
here," he said. "The irony about it is that there
are so many people that are attempting to do
it, and they could be doing it even as we
speak in their garages.

"It is time for us to develop the package in a
responsible manner, and make the package
available to the world. I think I have faith in
the world that they will handle it properly."

'Irresponsible' plan

But the plans of Professor Zavos and his
colleagues received an unenthusiastic
response in the UK.

Dr Harry Griffin is assistant director of the
Roslin Institute, Scotland, which successfully
cloned Dolly the sheep.

He told BBC News
Online: "It would be
wholly irresponsible to
try to clone a human
being, given the
present state of the
technology.

"The success rate with animal cloning is about
one to two per cent in the published results,
and I think lower than that on average. I don't
know anyone working in this area who thinks
the rate will easily be improved.

"There are many cases where the cloned
animal dies late in pregnancy or soon after
birth.

"The chances of success are so low it would
be irresponsible to encourage people to think
there's a real prospect. The risks are too great
for the woman, and of course for the child.

"I remain opposed to the idea of cloning human
beings. Even if it were possible and safe -
which it's not - it wouldn't be in the interest of
the child to be a copy of its parent."

Tom Horwood, of the Catholic Media Office in
London, told BBC News Online: "A lot of our
objections come down to questions of
technique.

'Morally abhorrent'

"But beyond that, cloning human beings is
inconsistent with their dignity, and involves
seeing them as a means, not an end.

"The scientists involved in the project are
planning a conference in Rome to explain their
plans.

"I don't think you'll start getting lots of papal
pronouncements just because they're meeting
in Rome.

"The reaction in the Vatican will be the same
as everywhere else - that the project is
morally abhorrent and ethically very dubious."