Fertility expert: 'I can clone a human being'
By Steve Connor,
The Independent
| 04. 22. 2009
A controversial fertility doctor claimed yesterday to have cloned 14 human embryos and transferred 11 of them into the wombs of four women who had been prepared to give birth to cloned babies.
The cloning was recorded by an independent documentary film-maker who has testified to The Independent that the cloning had taken place and that the women were genuinely hoping to become pregnant with the first cloned embryos specifically created for the purposes of human reproduction.
Panayiotis Zavos has broken the ultimate taboo of transferring cloned embryos into the human womb, a procedure that is a criminal offence in Britain and illegal in many other countries. He carried out the work at a secret lab-oratory, probably located in the Middle East where there is no cloning ban. Dr Zavos, a naturalised American, also has fertility clinics in Kentucky and Cyprus, where he was born. His patients - three married couples and a single woman - came from Britain, the United States and an unspecified country in the Middle East.
None of the embryo transfers led to a viable pregnancy...
Related Articles
By Antonio Regalado, MIT Technology Review | 05.06.2024
It was a cool morning at the beef teaching unit in Gainesville, Florida, and cow number #307 was bucking in her metal cradle as the arm of a student perched on a stool disappeared into her cervix. The arm held...
By Gregory E. Kaebnick, STAT | 09.15.2023
Ian Wilmut, the British scientist behind the first-ever cloning of a mammal, died Sept. 10, leaving behind a twofold legacy. One part is groundbreaking science. Creating Dolly required a combination of genome manipulation and reproductive tools that helped launch what...
Poster for King of Clones (Netflix documentary) via Wikipedia
Back in the early years of this century, the most prominent rogue in biotech was a South Korean scientist named Hwang Woo-Suk. He became one of the best-known scientists in the world, and achieved rock-star status in Korea, when he reported his success using human cloning to create embryonic stem cells. Not long thereafter it was revealed that he had faked his results, triggering a new round of global headlines and...
By Nick Schager, The Daily Beast | 06.23.2023
Poster for King of Clones (Netflix documentary) via Wikipedia
Cloning is, at heart, about the fear of death and the desire to defeat it. Consequently, biologist and researcher Dr. Hwang Woo-suk’s breakthroughs in the field made him not only a...