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U.S. House votes to ban human cloning
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
NEW YORK, AUG. 1. Calling it, among other things, ``science gone
crazy'', the U.S. House of Representatives voted to ban all
cloning of human embryos. By a vote of 265 to 162 the House
outlawed human cloning with fines up to $ 1 million and a 10-year
prison term to anyone involved in this profession or trade.
``This House should not be giving the green light to mad
scientists to tinker with the gift of life. It is science gone
crazy'', argued the Republican Congressman, Mr. J. C. Watts. The
Bill passed the House with the support of 200 Republicans, 63
Democrats and 2 Independents.
The vote to ban human cloning came shortly after the House
defeated an alternative proposal to allow cloning solely for
research that would be helpful in coming to terms with terrible
diseases. That was rejected by a 249 to 178 vote. The
philosophical and scientific debate and differences aside, the
general consensus was that human beings should not be cloned, as
was produced ``Dolly'' the sheep, in 1997.
A similar Bill on human cloning has been introduced in the Senate
by Mr. Sam Brownback, Republican from Kansas. And the Senate
Majority Leader, Mr. Tom Daschle, has said that he is ``opposed
to the effort to clone under virtually any circumstance''. But
Mr. Brownback's office has maintained that Mr. Daschle has done
little to advance the Bill.
The House vote on banning human cloning and the pending vote in
the Senate come at a time when the President, Mr. George W. Bush,
is getting ready to decide whether to permit Federal funding of
research on stem cells derived from human embryos. Mr. Bush
supported the ban on human cloning. ``The moral and ethical
issues posed by human cloning are profound and cannot be ignored
in the quest for scientific discovery'', the administration
maintained prior to the House vote.
After the vote in the House of Representatives, Mr. Bush hailed
the outcome saying, ``We must advance the promise and cause of
science, but must do so in a way that honours and respects
life''. But those who opposed the outright ban on human cloning
argued that a legislative defeat would make stem cell research
more difficult. In the House many law makers who supported stem
cell research voted for the ban on human cloning.
The White House has come under intense pressure and lobbying with
respect to Federal funding on stem cell research. Those who want
the President to come out positively argue that research in this
area will go a long way in coming to grips with such diseases as
Alzheimers and Parkinsons.
But during a recent trip to Europe, Pope John Paul II urged Mr.
Bush to reject research on stem cells. The President is expected
to take a position somewhere in the middle - that is, proceeding
with Federal funding for research in the area but with tough
restrictions.
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Section : International Previous : N.Ireland: Parties asked to respond by Aug. 6 Next : E.U. court upholds ban | |
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