Parkinsn's Email List Message

Posting to the Parkinsn List is a benefit of Subscription


[Message Prev][Message Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Message Index][Thread Index]

Germany's Ethics Council Rejects Cloning


The source of this article is Deutsche Welle: 

13.09.2004  
 
 Germany's Ethics Council Rejects Cloning  
 
 The National Ethics Council in Germany announced on Monday that it would 
continue to oppose the cloning of human embryos for research despite calls for 
more research into its benefits.

The German National Ethics Council, the 25-member body created in 2001 by the 
Federal Government to offer advice on ethical issues in the life sciences, 
announced on Monday that it would continue to oppose the cloning of human 
embryos for research. The announcement, which came after more than a year of 
study, reinforces a vote taken by the German parliament in 2002 that outlaws 
cloning. 

Human embryo cloning for stem cells is illegal in Germany, although research 
from stem cells outside Germany has been allowed by the German parliament which 
first passed a ban on all types of human cloning, be it for reproductive or 
therapeutic purposes, as far back as 1991. 

The National Ethics Council had been set the task of investigating the nature 
of stem cell research by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in late 2002. The subject 
was brought to the fore once again when the British government loosened the 
restrictions governing human cloning in July and granted its first license for 
cloning for stem cell research on Aug. 11 this year. 

Eight days after the British passed a law that allowed the cloning of human 
embryos for research purposes, the chairman of National Ethics Council called 
on the government to revive the debate on therapeutic cloning.


"Even though the Bundestag has clearly said 'no' to therapeutic cloning, it is 
now time to readdress, and discuss the issue in a more precise and 
differentiated way," Spiros Simitis said in an interview with the Frankfurter 
Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper last month after the council debated the issue in 
Berlin.

Council divided on cloning topic

It was clear at the time that stances varied considerably across the 25-member 
council, which includes scientists, theologians, business executives and trade 
union representatives, and the publication of the statement was put off until 
September. But the council, which has no legislative power, made clear that the 
statement on Monday was far from unanimously supported. 

The debate in Germany is likely to continue. Reproductive human cloning is 
illegal in most countries but in some, including Sweden, Canada, the United 
States and Belgium, the cloning of human embryos is allowed if the purpose is 
to conduct research on diseases. Scientists think human tissue produced from 
embryonic stem cells could be used to treat Alzheimer's, diabetes and other 
illnesses. Stem cells are non-specialized cells that can produce mature 
specialized cells.

Liberal states may attract scientists, families

Last week it became known that a couple from Northern Ireland had been given 
permission to pursue the process of producing an embryo whose cells could 
eventually help their three-year-old son recover from a potentially deadly 
blood disease. If the process proves to be a success, Simitis warned that a 
type of "bio tourism" might develop within the EU and that German researchers 
would emigrate to Britain if Germany did not rethink its stance.

The spokeswoman for research policy of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 
parliamentary group, Katharina Reiche, and the Libreal FDP's expert on 
bioethics, Ulrike Flach, have both gone on the record expressing support for a 
new debate. But the CDU deputy group leader Maria Böhmer has strongly rejected 
the idea. 

Ulrich Kasparick, a permanent secretary to the Federal Research Ministry, said 
the ministry saw no need for action. 

"There is no majority for changing the ban on cloning," he told the FAZ.
 
 
 Author DW staff (nda)  
 
  © Deutsche Welle 

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:listserv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn


Parkinsn's List Subject Index

Parkinsn's List Thread Index

Parkinsn's Archive Treasures Doctors, students, patients and caregivers find current Parkinson's information such as the Algorithm, Caregivers Handbook, and talks by respected Movement Disorder Specialists.

Mail converted by MHonArc 2.6.10
Site Hosting donated by He.net
&
Grant from The Parkinson Alliance