US President Barack Obama is expected to lift ban on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research as part of a pledge to separate science and politics. White House officials say Obama will authorise the move on March 9, 2009, a major reversal of US policy. Ex-President George W Bush blocked the federal funding on human embryonic stem cell lines created after August 9, 2001. Scientists say stem cell research will lead to medical breakthroughs, but many religious groups oppose the research.
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Correspondents say the reversal of US policy is part of President Obama’s pledge to make clear that his administration wants scientific research to be free from political interference.
It expected that his announcement about government money to fund research will be accompanied by a promise that what he calls “sound science” will be respected by his administration.
‘Vindicated’
Scientists have also been developing techniques to create stem cells without using embryos, by modifying other types of cell.
The move to lift the ban on federal funding was welcomed by stem cell Scientists. The restrictions that President Bush has placed on funding of human embryonic stem cell research have handcuffed our scientists
US President Barack Obama
“I feel vindicated after eight years of struggle, and I know it’s going to energise my research team,” Dr George Daley of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute told the Associated Press.
The federal funding ban has meant that scientists have been forced to separate any privately-funded stem cell research from their government-funded activity.
Obama made it clear during the presidential election campaign that, if elected, he would reverse the Bush administration’s decision.
President Bush had twice vetoed congressional attempts to have the ban lifted.
“I strongly support expanding research on stem cells,” Mr Obama said on the campaign trail.
“I believe that the restrictions that President Bush has placed on funding of human embryonic stem cell research have handcuffed our scientists and hindered our ability to compete with other nations.”
President Bush and other social conservatives argued that the embryos are human life and therefore should not be destroyed.
Speaking to the media in January, Robert Evans, a pastor and bioethicist, said he would oppose any move to allow federal funding for new stem cell lines.
“What it signals is that the human embryo has been denied moral standing and a corresponding right to life,” he said.
“As an evangelical who believes all life is created equal in the image of God, and that we have moral standing from the moment of conception, I would view that as a very chilling decision.”
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