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European ban on human cloning

Sunday, January 11, 1998 Published at 18:37 GMT
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European ban on human cloning
Thirteen countries are signing the first binding international ban on human cloning on Monday.

The countries, all members of the Council of Europe, are incorporating the ban into the European Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine.

The signatories are Denmark, Finland, France, Greece, Iceland, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Romania, San Marino, Spain, Sweden and Turkey. Another seven members are considering endorsing the ban as soon as it has been ratified in five countries.

The signing ceremony is to take place at the French Foreign Ministry in Paris after President Jacques Chirac opens a conference of Europe's national ethics committees.

The ban will rule out human cloning, but it allows the cloning of cells for research purposes.

Britain has been at the forefront of the debate since scientists in Scotland first cloned the sheep Dolly from an adult cell fused with an egg.


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But fears about the dangers of genetic engineering mounted after the American physicist Richard Seed announced earlier this week that he was ready to start cloning human babies.

Dr Seed predicted that as many as 200,000 human clones a year would be produced once his process was perfected.

He says that in addition to helping infertile women, human cloning will aid medical research.


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Many scientists agree that cloned human tissue could be used to replace body parts damaged by disease or injury.

Meanwhile, US President Bill Clinton has urged Congress to pass a five-year ban on human cloning experiments.

But Dr Seed said if the United States outlawed human cloning, he would set up his operation elsewhere - mentioning Mexico, the Cayman Islands or the Bahamas as possible alternatives.


Relevant Stories

Clinton calls for human cloning ban (10 Jan 98 | World)
Dolly ... The Next Generation? (09 Jan 98 | Sci/Tech)
To clone or not to clone (07 Jan 98 | Sci/Tech)
Scientist ready 'to clone humans' (07 Jan 98 | Sci/Tech)
First there was Dolly... (19 Dec 97 | Sci/Tech)

Internet Links

Roslin Institute
The Coucil for Responsible Genetics
Council of Europe

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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