Chinese legislators are facing one of their biggest challenges --
the formulation of laws on human cloning, gene resources protection
and biosafety.
"We are facing a lot of difficulties during our current legislative
work, for example, in trying to strike a balance between ethical
considerations and pioneering scientific research, and in
respecting current international standards while taking into
account the country's needs," said Zhu Lilan, a senior legislator
with the National People's Congress.
Differences of opinion on the safety and the development of gene
and cloning technology also add difficulty to legislative
decisions.
"Yet no matter how complex the issues are, the legislation cannot
wait, as it has a direct bearing on people's lives," Zhu said at a
meeting of biology and law experts yesterday.
Experts called on the NPC to draft separate laws covering different
issues instead of writing just one comprehensive law, and to give
priority to the more urgent areas of legislation, such as laws
governing the protection of gene resources.
China, one of the world's largest countries, has abundant plants,
animals and human genes.
In
recent years, some foreign businesses and research institutes, in
the name of giving free blood tests to the Chinese people,
collected a lot of blood samples.
The experts also called for an immediate creation of a committee to
deal with ethical issues.
Comprised of experts in science and philosophy, the committee
should monitor life science research such as that on human cloning
and stem cells, and see to it that the work is guided by a clearly
codified set of ethical principles.
Shanghai and some other cities have set up ethical committees in
universities, research institutes and hospitals, but many of them
have no real power.
"The legislation is not to restrain scientific research, but to
provide a standardized and better environment for scientific
research," Zhu said.
China was part of the six-nation team that successfully constructed
the draft sequence of the entire human genome in February last
year. The other five countries involved were the United States,
Britain, Japan, France and Germany.
China finished 1 percent of the sequence map.
According to existing regulations, the country does not endorse,
permit, support or accept reproductive human cloning under any
condition.
(China Daily April 18, 2002)
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