The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity
Responds to Cloning Around the World
Chicago, Illinois -
May 20,2005 - The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity is
disappointed by the announcement that teams of scientists in South
Korea and Britain have produced cloned human embryos and destroyed
them for research purposes.
South Korean scientists have developed stem cell lines from human
embryos cloned from the body cells of patients with certain genetic
diseases in hopes of some day deriving cures from the research. A
team of scientists from the University of Newcastle has also cloned
a human embryo, the result of limited licenses recently given by the
British government.
C. Ben Mitchell, Senior Fellow at The Center for Bioethics and Human
Dignity observes, “Sadly, this cloning activity flies in the face of
the recent ban on cloning passed by the United Nations. The United
Nations is hardly anti-science. It is simply committed to supporting
good science—not science that manufactures and shreds the youngest
of human beings to accomplish its ends.”
“The embryos that are being produced and destroyed here are indeed
human beings,” adds Center Fellow, David Fletcher. “They are
‘beings,’ not merely cells such as blood cells or skin cells, and
they are genetically human. To use them as raw material for medical
treatment is deeply troubling, especially since stem cells obtained
from adults without harming those adults appear to be so promising
medically.”
The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity concludes that any
benefit that might be obtained through the type of research
announced yesterday does not warrant the harm of embryo-destructive
research or the exploitation of women to obtain the still
considerable number of eggs needed.
For Interviews with Center Personnel
Contact Sarah Flashing, Director of Public
Relations, at 847-317-4097, or by email at
sflashing@cbhd.org
About The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity
The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity is a 501(c)(3) non-profit
international center located just north of Chicago, Illinois. Its
mission is to develop reasoned perspectives on all of today's bioethical
issues and to disseminate them to health care professionals, academia,
cultural and church leaders, public policy makers, and the media in
order to protect human dignity. CBHD
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