Sentinel & Enterprise

Hong Kong pulls visa for man behind gene-edited babies claim

- By Kanis Leung and Emily Wang Fujiyama The Associated Press

Hong Kong on Tuesday revoked a visa it granted to a Chinese scientist who set off an ethical debate five years ago with claims that he made the world’s first geneticall­y edited babies, pulling it hours after he announced his research plans in the financial hub.

He Jiankui shocked the world in 2018 when he announced he had altered the embryos of twin girls, with many in the scientific community criticizin­g his work as unethical. He was convicted by a mainland Chinese court in 2019 of practicing medicine without a license and sentenced to three years in prison with a fine of 3 million yuan ($445,000).

Ten months after his release, He announced in Beijing on Tuesday that he had been granted a Hong Kong visa and was in contact with universiti­es, research institutes and companies in the financial hub.

He said he would consider working in Hong Kong if there were an appropriat­e opportunit­y, and that he plans to research gene therapy for rare hereditary diseases.

“My scientific research will comply with the ethics codes and internatio­nal consensus on scientific research,” he said at a brief news conference.

But in a statement hours later in which it didn’t refer to He by name but said it was responding to reports about a visa applicant who was jailed because of illegal medical practices, the Hong Kong government said it had revoked the visa.

“After the immigratio­n department reviewed the applicatio­n, it suspected that someone had made false statements to get the visa approval,” the statement wrote. “The director of immigratio­n has declared that the visa is invalid in accordance with the law.”

Law enforcemen­t officers would conduct a criminal investigat­ion to follow up the case, it added.

He didn’t immediatel­y reply to an Associated Press request for comment.

His announceme­nt in 2018 sparked a global debate over the ethics of gene editing. In interviews with The Associated Press, he said he had used a tool called CRISPR to try to disable a gene that allows HIV to enter cells in an attempt to give the babies the ability to resist AIDS.

The CRISPR tool has been tested elsewhere in adults to treat diseases, but many in the scientific community criticized He’s work as medically unnecessar­y and unethical partly because any genetic changes could be passed down to future generation­s.

In convicting him in 2019, the Chinese court in Shenzhen said he had not obtained qualificat­ions as a doctor, had pursued fame and profit, deliberate­ly violated Chinese regulation­s on scientific research, and crossed an ethical line in both scientific research and medicine. The court also confirmed a third birth, saying his project involved three gene- edited babies born to two women.

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