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Wednesday, 11 December, 2002, 22:50 GMT
China approves stem cell bank
China is trying to become a leader in biological research
The Chinese Government has approved the setting up of the country's first state-run stem cell bank, according to state media.
The Xinhua news agency said the bank would be built in Tianjin, close to the capital Beijing, and would aim to provide treatments for various diseases. A stem cell transplant centre at the facility would eventually be able to provide transplants for 200 patients every year, the agency said. BBC science correspondent Richard Black says this is the latest in a series of moves aimed at making China a world leader in the modern biological sciences. Thousands of samples According to Xinhua, the bank has already gathered 6,000 samples of human tissue. However, experts say that similar banks in the United States typically have about 4.5m samples. Nonetheless, when the Tianjin facility is completed in eight years' time, it will be the largest stem cell bank in Asia. By its side there will be a medical centre designed to turn the concept of stem cell therapies into practice, providing treatments initially for several hundred people a year. Growing Asian power Our correspondent says it is the latest indication that east Asia, and China in particular, is growing in importance as a leader in the new sciences of genomics, cloning and stem cells.
Even as the Chinese announced their stem cell bank, Stanford University in the US was drawing criticism from religious groups for setting up a new research programme involving therapeutic cloning. Our correspondent says such criticism is not as vocal in east Asia.
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