Updated Nov.21,2005 19:41 KST

Interview Prompted Occyte Donation Scandal

Hwang Team 'Paid 20 Women for Donating Ova'
Ova Procurement Scandal Makes Worldwide Waves
Stem Cell Pioneer Must Come Clean
Junior Researchers Did Donate Ova for Hwang Project
Science Has no Plans to Retract Hwang Research Paper
Hwang Supporters Condemn MBC Investigative Report
Investigative Program Pays Price for Targeting Hwang
The tinderbox that caused Prof. Gerald Schatten to sever ties with Koreans cloning pioneer Prof. Hwang Woo-suk was an interview a researcher in Hwang��s team gave in a leading scientific journal, the Washington Post reported Sunday.

The paper said Schatten, who ��served as an eloquent translator, spokesman and a link to the centers of scientific power in the Western world,�� decided to split because he had evidence that Hwang obtained human egg cells by unethical means, the U.S. paper said. The evidence is an interview during which ��a young PhD student in Hwang��s lab told an interviewer from the scientific journal Nature that she and another young co-worker were among several women who had donated eggs.��

Ethical guidelines bar donations from junior team members because they cannot be truly voluntary, while vociferous debate also rages about the ethics of egg donation in general, which is sometimes dangerous.

��Concerns about Hwang��s experiments were amplified by the rumors that the student had been paid for her eggs,�� which Hwang quickly denied, the daily said. Instead, Hwang blamed her poor English for what he said was a misunderstanding, the paper said.

The breakup has blighted a stem cell research project whose future had looked bright until last month, when, according to the paper, Schatten��s ��eyes brimmed with tears repeatedly as he talked about the benefits the project might bring to humankind.��

([email protected] )


Copyright (c) 2007 The Chosun Ilbo & Digital Chosun Ilbo All rights reserved.
Contact [email protected] for more information.
Privacy Statement Contact [email protected]