Originally published November 11, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified November 11, 2007 at 2:04 AM
Ban cloning or it will happen, say researchers
The international community faces a stark choice: outlaw human cloning or prepare for the creation of cloned humans, U.N. researchers said Saturday. Previous...
LONDON — The international community faces a stark choice: outlaw human cloning or prepare for the creation of cloned humans, U.N. researchers said Saturday.
Previous attempts to reach a binding worldwide treaty foundered over divisions on whether to outlaw all cloning or permit cloning of cells for research.
The best solution may be to ban human cloning but allow countries to conduct strictly controlled therapeutic research, including stem-cell research, according to the report from the Japan-based United Nations University Institute for Advanced Studies.
Almost all countries oppose human cloning, and more than 50 nations have introduced laws banning it. But lack of binding global legislation gives scientists an opening to create human clones in countries where bans do not exist.
"Failure to outlaw reproductive cloning means it is just a matter of time until cloned individuals share the planet," said Brendan Tobin, a human-rights lawyer who co-authored the report.
"If failure to compromise continues, the world community must accept responsibility and ensure that any cloned individual receives full human-rights protection," he said.
Cloning-research proponents argue it offers great hope for producing replacement tissue and the potential for a cure for several diseases.
The report recommends permitting cloning cells for research — but not cloning aimed at duplicating a person or animal.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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