Dear Citizen: In regard to the following article
the reader should know that the business of selling body parts from aborted children is a
well established and very lucrative "business" in the United States. -
Don J. Grundmann
Aussie Company Will Sell Tissue
From Aborted Babies
Sydney, Australia -- A Sydney company is involved in a plan to collect
tissue from aborted babies and export it for medical experiments.
The proposal, to harvest tissue from some of the 90,000 babies aborted in
Australia each year has been condemned by pro-life groups for fostering an international
trade in human body parts.
The London Daily Telegraph has established that a Dutch bio-tech company,
Crucell, working through a Sydney contract research organisation, Parexel International,
has applied to the ethics committee of Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Adelaide, Australia for
access to the tissue.
It is believed to be the first proposed commercial collection of fetal
tissue in Australia, but those behind the project were hoping to carry it out without the
public knowing.
The tissue would be sent to Crucell's laboratories in the Netherlands and
used to grow cell lines for research into vaccines for infectious diseases such as HIV and
ebola.
The abortion practitioners who collect the tissue stand to make money out
of the project -- they would be paid an "hourly rate" for their time.
This appears to contravene National Health and Medical Research Council's
guidelines on the use of fetal tissue for research, which state that there should be no
"element of commerce" involved.
The NHMRC has no knowledge of Crucell's plan. Crucell, and Parexel's US
parent company, are listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange.
Deputy Prime Minister John Anderson, the Federal Government's most vocal
critic of embryonic stem cell research, wants secrecy surrounding the project to be
lifted.
"I'd like to know a lot more about what sort of guidelines are going
to be put in place," he said.
Right to Life Australia spokeswoman Margaret Tighe said the plan was
appalling.
"Not only do we kill babies and use Medicare funds for it but here we
are contemplating making money and trading in the bodies of these poor unfortunates,"
she said. "How much lower can we sink in our lack of respect for human life?"
Both Crucell and Parexel had refused to name the hospital for
"commercial reasons".
A Queen Elizabeth spokesman said the application was withdrawn last week
but Crucell maintained it was proceeding.
Australia is one of only four countries worldwide that could provide a
source of fetal tissue free from mad cow disease contamination.
The Food and Drug Administration in the US has ranked Australia and New
Zealand in the top tier of countries free of infectious diseases and it is this
"clean bill of health" that has turned Crucell's eye on the UK.
Parexel's Sydney director, Muriel Boutillon, referred all comment to
Crucell's Netherlands-based spokeswoman Louise Dolfing. Dolfing said if the application
was approved it could help to find vaccines for new diseases such as SARS and save many
lives.
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