DON'T OUTLAW EMBRYO CLONING, CALL RUSSIAN SCHOLARS

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MOSCOW, November 1 (RIA Novosti) - Embryo cloning for medical and research purposes does not deserve prohibition, two prominent Russian scientists stressed to a news conference today. These were Sergei Kolesnikov, Full Member of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, President of its East Siberian Research Centre; and Gennadi Sukhikh, Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences. He heads the clinical immunology laboratory at the Moscow-based Centre of Obstetrics, Gynaecology and Perinatology.

"I see no problems whatsoever in work with embryos up to fourteen days of age," said Academician Kolesnikov.

Embryonic stem cells were first separated in 1998. As they multiply, these cells can develop into any kind of human cells. So they can be used for substitution therapy to restore all malfunctioning human organs, be it liver, pancreas, vessels, heart, the nervous system or the locomotor apparatus, he explained.

"If we start intensive stem cellular therapy of infantile cerebral paralysis very early in the patients' life, a majority will come to the age of twelve months fully cured," said Dr. Sukhikh. True, stem cells can be separated from the human marrow, adipose tissue or umbilical blood, but they are far less effective than embryonic, he pointed out.

A federal law of 2002 suspends reproductive embryonic cloning throughout Russia up to 2007. Prospects of human cloning are extremely vague, so the suspension was a must, says Sergei Kolesnikov, who was on the drafting team. He, however, does not rule out the law eventually amended. Thus, the United Kingdom amended a similar law, 2002-the year Russia passed the ban-to authorise embryonic cloning in medical and research purposes.

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