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SEOUL, Jan. 10 (Xinhuanet) --
South Korean clone researcher Hwang Woo-suk was proved to be a bold cheater, not
a national hero, with the releasing of the final report on investigation over
his stem cell researches on Tuesday.
A special panel of the Seoul
National University (SNU) judged in its conclusive report that Hwang's two
papers on human embryonic stem cells both were fabricated.
In the paper published in February 2004 by U.S.-
based journal of Science, Hwang's team claimed it successfully cloned human
embryo and extracted a stem cell line from it for the first time in the world.
Hwang's team claimed in the paper published by
Science in May 2005 that it successfully produced 11 patient-tailored stem cell
lines. The development cited in the paper was widely viewed an important
progress in the therapeutic cloning research.
The two papers made Hwang quickly become top-ranking
scientist major in stem cell research and an idol much loved by local people.
However, Tuesday's report made clear that Hwang's
team's so-called epoch-making success is only a shell game, with which Hwang' s
team gained honor, huge financial support and trust.
How dare Hwang to cheat the more than 47 million
population of the country who pinned much hope on his research? How dare Hwang
to make a fool of the South Korean government who gave the title of "supreme
scientist" to him?
What kind of lessons should be learned from the
scandal?
Hwang's "success" stirred a bio-engineering fever in
the Asian country. Even some housewives showed their strong ardor to the stem
cell research by making registration to donate their ova.
Especially from early 2004, like a film superstar,
Hwang almost appeared daily in various media interviews and public events, which
made his popularity much high among local people.
Local people also held him as national hero and
treasure, for they thought Hwang brought the country stand in the front line
concerning to stem cell research in the international community.
Media's lavished praising reports also made local
people deem Hwang is the savior of the patients suffering from hard-to-cure
diseases.
Hwang became a symbol -- a symbol of South Korea's
international image and future of the country.
That's why the debates over the ethical and
authenticity controversy surrounding Hwang's research became a one not within
scientific circle, but among almost all the local people, beyond ages, gender,
vocations and religions.
As a result, when the scandal came to spotlight, it
delivered aheavy blow to South Korean people morally.
Fortunately, local people already started
self-reflection. Many local netizens expressed their view on website that in
future they need more rational judge than emotional feeling when facing such
case.
The South Korean government is under fire of omitting
supervise of Hwang's research, which was promoted as "National Hopeful Project
for 21st Century" by the government in last year.
South Korean government set a monitoring team to
supervise Hwang 's sensitive research in May 2004. However, critics noted that
the government failed to play a supervisory role after providing taxpayer's
money to the research team except holding one meeting in the past one and half
years.
Since 1998, South Korean government have provided
65.8 billion won (65.9 million dollars) to Hwang, the largest ever spent by the
country on a single research group, according to a statistic made by a local
political party.
But the Seoul government failed to verify the
spending of the subsidies.
In wake of the shameful scandal, South Korean
Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) had announced it will retract
financial support to Hwang's team.
Earlier Tuesday, the ministry also said it plans to
overhaul the nation's bioethics law in the first half of this year, including
those sections related to human egg donation.
The ministry is mulling to set up special bodies to
manage the donated eggs so that the government can conduct supervise on the
donation process.
Earlier in the day, the SNU special panel said
Hwang's team had received 2,061 eggs from 129 women since November 2002, some of
which were provided by Hwang's subordinate researchers.
South Korean Prime Minister Lee Hae-chan also plans
to chair a meeting of science-related ministers and presidential secretaries on
Wednesday.
The meeting is hoped to assess the cause of the
scandal and discuss fellow up measures.
Much lessons should be learned from Hwang's case.
The scandal hurt the country in the short run, but
may help South Korea to set up a real healthy system for bio-engineering
research in the long run, pointed out some scientists here.
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