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This section
contains various historical press releases from the RCN. Currently the RCN
is being reorganized to reflect a politically neutral position on human cloning.
April 2002 Press Release

Dr. Antinori claims successful human clone pregnancy
(by Randolfe Wicker - RCN Spokesperson)
January
2002 Press Release

(by Randolfe Wicker - RCN Spokesperson)
June &
July 2001 News
Summaries

(by Christine Ryan - RCN General Editor)
Press
Release - 9th March 2001.
On
Friday the 9th of March 2001 a new chapter in human reproduction was opened. An International Cloning Consortium announced at the
conference in Rome that they were now fully prepared to perform therapeutic
human cloning. This medical
treatment would be offered to infertile couples to allow them to have a child.
The three core members of the international cloning consortium are Dr.
Antinori (President of the Italian society for reproductive medicine), Dr.
Panayiotis Zavos (American fertility specialist and andrologist) and Dr. Avi Ben
Abraham (Israeli-American biotechnologist).
Predictably
the Vatican have opposed the proposal calling it monstrous and
"grotesque", but Antinori contended: "I am
not a monster. Nor is what we are doing monstrous.
My only aim is to give infertile couples happiness in the form of
children. The next step is cloning, that’s all... Nothing should get in
the way of a couples right to have a child... Religion must never get in the way
of science."
"Cloning may be considered as the last frontier to
overcome male sterility and give the possibility to infertile males to pass on
their genetic pattern,'' Antinori told a packed auditorium of scientists and
journalists. The
consortium has in mind cases where the husband is sterile, and the wife refuses
to be artificially inseminated with "a stranger’s sperm".
The described example is of a man who lost both testicles in a car crash,
and whose wife "wants to reproduce the genes of the man she loves, not some
other man’s from a sperm bank".
Dr. Zavos added "We don't want the government involved in this
project... This is a high-tech, serious project and we're not going to bring in
the technocrats if they are not needed... The genie is out of the bottle. We
need to make sure it is bottled and disseminated responsibly,''
Report
on the Conference
The
Human Therapeutic Cloning conference took place in the Institute of Clinical
Obstetrics and Gynaecology. The
international cloning consortium have announced that they are now fully prepared
to begin their Human Cloning project. They
have the funding, location and expertise necessary.
Dr. Severino Antinori (who heads the consortium) explained that the group
had secured almost "unlimited" private funds. In fact Dr. Antinori is himself a millionaire, directly due
to the three infertility clinics he owns in Italy. The location for the project is a Mediterranean country;
undisclosed for security reasons. Both
Zavos and Antinori have a wealth of experience in human reproductive science and
technology. Zavos having performed in
vitro fertilization for over 23 years.
It was speculated at the conference that the undisclosed Mediterranean
country was Israel, but this was neither confirmed or denied by the consortium.
The scientists intend to take an adult body cell from the infertile
father (who can't produce sperm), and inject the nucleus into his wife's egg
that has been enucleated (had it's chromosomes removed).
This zygotic cell will divide and differentiate into an embryo that can
be implanted in the mother, resulting in a child genetically identical to the
father. Much like a latter born
identical twin. The first
experiments to lay a safe and efficient groundwork for the cloning program, will
begin about April. The first
healthy cloned embryo should be ready for implantation into a mothers womb
within one and a half to two years. The
consortium will not clone dead children or famous people.
This controversial service is only being offered by the Raelian's company
'Clonaid'.
The opposition to reproductive human cloning made numerous references to
the low rate of cloning efficiency and possible developmental abnormalities that
may result. Dr. Zavos dispelled
this theory by explaining that, unlike animal cloning programs, the
International Cloning Consortium would not be implanting scores of embryos into
many surrogate mothers to obtain as many pregnancies as possible.
His twenty-three years of human in vitro fertilization research
has laid the foundations for a more sophisticated approach.
This involved genetic screening of embryos at a very early stage (a
procedure not undertaken in animal cloning) and only implanting normal healthy
embryos. Screening would obviously
cost more, but this would be the only ethical approach when using this
technology in humans.
The
Catholic church was typically negative. The
usual misconceptions were aired with Monsignor Mauro Cozzoli, from the Vatican
Bioethics Commission saying "every child must be born with his or her
genetic individuality - they should not simply be a photocopy"; a rather
strange statement suggesting that identical twins were against Vatican policy.
Antinori hit back saying "Cloning creates ordinary children, they
would be unique individuals, not photocopies...".
LIFE, the anti-abortion charity, was theoretically against the plans, but
said they were "inevitable". Even the Catholic Bishops, usually
steadfast in their condemnation of reproductive human cloning, had an air of
inevitability about them. Bishop
Elio Sgreccia, head of the John Paul II Institute for Bioethics at Rome's
Gemelli hospital, said that "The forecasts [about human cloning] sadden us
but don't scare us", which is as close to a step forward as one can expect
from orthodox Christian fundamentalists. Another
opposition voice came from Lord Winston, who dismissed the consortium intentions
as a "publicity stunt", and that they didn't have "any serious
intentions" of undertaking the project.
The fact that Dr. Zavos has left the University of Kentucky to begin
working on the project would suggest otherwise.
Supporters
of the consortiums proposal include Professor G. Pence, who has written a book
in support of human cloning, M. Eibert, an attorney who advocates the rights of
infertile couples to use cloning technology to have children, and R. H. Wicker
the CEO of the Charity organization, the Human Cloning Foundation (www.HumanCloning.org).
Despite the media's attempt to portray a unified front against reproductive
human cloning, a CNN poll (cast on the 10th of March) of over 10,000 on-line
voters, found that over a third of the population supported reproductive human
cloning. A remarkable achievement considering the consistent bad publicity
cloning has received from Hollywood and the Media.
During
the conference, Dr. Richard Seed (heading a rival cloning initiative)
re-iterated his human cloning intentions. There
are now three groups publicly researching reproductive human cloning: the
Antinori/Zavos consortium, Prof. R. Seeds initiative and the Raelians company
"Clonaid". The Human
Cloning Foundation only supports the Antinori/Zavos lead International Cloning
Consortium, which is the only group with the resources and experience to ensure
that the procedures are conducted safely and efficiently. The last thing
any member of the HCF wants, is for the first cloned baby to be unhealthy or
physically abnormal.
The
conference, and the surrounding publicity, provided an excellent platform for
raising the public's awareness of the true meaning of therapeutic human cloning:
Reproductive freedom, informed choice, and the only route by which
certain infertile couples can have a child.
The non-religious factions of the opposition have once again rallied
against this novel infertility technology in an attempt to be politically
correct, and to avoid a public backlash against other areas of science.
The potential backlash against other forms of biological research is not
a justification for condemning infertile couples to remain childless, but
rather, a clear indication of the level of ignorance, unreasonable thought and
hysteria present in society today. The
media have mis-interpreted, hyped and plain face lied about human cloning in
order to win the ratings war. Most
of the media reports following the conference did not provide a balanced account
of the costs and benefits of human cloning, but set out deliberately to sway
public against this novel technology. A
technology that would allow infertile couples to have a genetically related
child. A technology that would
allow these couples to have the family they so desire.
"The genie is out of the bottle. We need to make sure
it is bottled and disseminated responsibly,''
(Dr. P. Zavos, 9th March 2001)
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