Friday, September 10, 2010

US resumes funding controversial stem cell research

 According to the article below, a US appeals court on Thursday granted an Obama administration request to temporarily lift a judge's ban on federal funding of research involving human embryonic stem cells. That means the for the time being at least, they can resume work on controversial human embryonic stem cell research. More legal action is pending.
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US resumes funding controversial stem cell research
The Economic Times:

WASHINGTON: The US government said it was resuming work on controversial human embryonic stem cell research on Friday after an appeals court ruled in its favor.

In the latest legal back-and-forth on the issue, a US appeals court on Thursday granted an Obama administration request to temporarily lift a judge's ban on federal funding of research involving human embryonic stem cells.

More legal action is pending but the National Institutes of Health said it would resume work that had been suspended. 'We are pleased with the court's interim ruling, which will allow promising stem cell research to continue while we present further arguments to the court in the weeks to come,' the NIH said in a statement.

"With the temporary stay in place, NIH has resumed intramural research and will continue its consideration of grants that were frozen by the preliminary injunction on August 23. The suspension of all grants, contracts, and applications that involve the use of human embryonic stem cells has been temporarily lifted," it added.

The three-judge panel of the appeals court said in its brief order on Thursday that it put on hold the judge's ban while it considers the merits of the administration's emergency request for a stay of his injunction. US District Judge Royce Lamberth ruled last month that the research violated U.S. law because it involved destroying human embryos.

The ruling was a setback for President Barack Obama, who had tried to expand the research. The appeals court ordered that briefs be filed by Sept 20. It then will have to decide whether its temporary administrative stay should be extended or ended.

Read on . . .


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