Company type | Private |
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Industry | Biotechnology |
Predecessor | Valiant Venture Ltd. |
Founded | Bahamas (1997)[1] |
Founder | Raël |
Headquarters | Riverside California |
Key people | Brigitte Boisselier, Thomas Kaenzig |
Products | RMX568, RMX2010 |
Services | CLONAID, INSURACLONE, OVULAID, CLONAPET |
Subsidiaries | BioFusion Tech Inc. |
Website | clonaid |
Part of a series of articles on the |
Raëlian movement |
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Doctrines |
Clonaid is an American-based human cloning organization, registered as a company in the Bahamas. Founded in 1997, it has philosophical ties with the UFO religion Raëlism,[1] which sees cloning as the first step in achieving immortality. On December 27, 2002, Clonaid's chief executive, Brigitte Boisselier, claimed that a baby clone, named Eve, was born. Media coverage of the claim sparked serious criticism and ethical debate that lasted more than a year. Florida attorney Bernard Siegel tried to appoint a special guardian for Eve and threatened to sue Clonaid, because he was afraid that the child might be treated like a lab rat.[2] Siegel, who heard the company's actual name was not Clonaid, decided that the Clonaid project was a sham.[3] Bioethicist Clara Alto condemned Clonaid for premature human experimentation and noted the high incidence of malformations and thousands of fetal deaths in animal cloning.[4]
CNN.com - Clonaid: Baby 'clone' returns home - Jan. 1, 2003
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