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| Thursday, January 8, 1998 Published at 13:20 GMT Sci/Tech Outrage over human cloning ![]() Dr Seed wants to clone human DNA
An American scientist who says he will begin experiments in human cloning has been attacked as "unscrupulous". The Chicago-based physicist Richard Seed has said he is "90% complete" in setting up a team of experts who would try to help infertile couples by attempting to clone humans. President Clinton's top adviser on bio-ethics has said Dr Seed should be stopped from attempting any such experiment and has described his intentions as morally inappropriate. A San Francisco geneticist, Roger Penderson, said: "I think that anybody who would propose to do this is preying on the uninformed and that's unscrupulous." The White House Press Secretary, Mike McCurry, has also rejected Dr Seed's claims. But Dr Seed has defended himself. "I can't really answer the critics who think it's a bad idea," he said. "They'll never be persuaded. As far as I'm concerned, they have rather small minds and a rather small view of the world." Debate continues His initiative has renewed public debate following the successful cloning of a sheep by scientists at the Roslin Institute in Scotland last year. It prompted President Clinton to propose a five-year ban on any research on human cloning. If successful he wants to offer a similar service in up to 20 other clinics across America. His technique involves taking an unfertilised egg from the ovary. The genetic material, or DNA, is extracted and replaced with the nucleus of an adult human cell. The egg is then implanted in the woman's womb and the resulting embryo is a clone of the person who donated the human cell nucleus. |
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