Updated Nov.17,2005 19:19 KST

Controversial Occyte Donation 'no Breach of Ethics'
Stem cell pioneer Prof. Hwang Woo-suk found support from a leading U.S. law firm specializing in bioethics, which said recent allegations that led to a rift with one of Hwang��s closest collaborators would not constitute a breach of ethics even if they were true. U.S. geneticist Gerald Schatten pulled out of the stem cell project over allegations that Hwang used the ova of a junior researcher. The team led by Hwang announced the success of the project in 2004.

According to insiders with the World Stem Cell Hub, John Qunn, a California law firm specializing in issues of genetic engineering, and others were commissioned to review the case and arrived at the conclusion that if the occyte donation from the junior researcher was truly voluntary, no criminal or ethical violation had occurred.

The firms arrived at the opinion keeping in mind that the U.S. did not have cut-and-dried ethical guidelines on the donation of egg cells in stem cell research until the National Academy of Sciences confirmed them in 2005. The new guidelines state that donors cannot be coerced or paid.

Thus if the junior researcher donated her ova before 2004 and was neither coerced nor received financial benefits, there were no ethical grounds for criticizing the donation. Hwang has said all eggs were obtained through volunteer donation.

Meanwhile, the British science journal Nature, which was the first to take the issue with rumors that a junior researcher donated her ova, told the Yonhap news agency Wednesday it had undertaken the investigation to find out exactly what happened.

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