Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-09-07-Speech-4-099"

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"en.20000907.2.4-099"2
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". Throughout the ages, mankind has had to consider how to guide scientific developments so as to bring them in line with ethical and social choices. The urgent nature of the subject should have demanded an effective approach: an immediate and absolute moratorium; in-depth reflection and a very wide-ranging basic debate prior to a directive laying down the rules to be adopted. That is not the case with the resolutions put to the vote today. I will therefore abstain on these motions for resolution. This issue is all the more sensitive when it concerns human beings and genetic foundations. We must, therefore, be extremely cautious, without going so far as to be obscurantist. Given the present state of our knowledge and of the ethical debate, and in view of the UK Government’s unacceptable authorisation of human cloning, the first thing we must seek is a total and absolute moratorium on all experiments in human cloning. The second, after hearing the opinion of the European Committee on Ethics, is to define clear guidelines that guarantee human dignity. As they stand at present, I do not like any of the resolutions submitted by the groups. The Socialist Group is not calling strongly enough for an immediate stop to all human cloning. The PPE Group seems to be making a final judgment on such sensitive points of discussion as the distinction between reproductive and other cloning. In my opinion, however, I think it would be useful to obtain an analysis from the European Committee on Ethics on these points, in order to clarify the issues."@en1

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