The Sun (Malaysia)

China jails scientist who gene-edited babies

He Jiankui and two others acted ‘in pursuit of personal fame and gain’ and seriously ‘disrupted medical order’

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BEIJING: A Chinese court yesterday sentenced the scientist who claimed to be behind the world’s first geneedited babies to three years in prison for illegal medical practice, state media reported.

He Jiankui (pix), who shocked the scientific community last year by announcing the birth of twins, whose genes had allegedly been altered to confer immunity to HIV, was also fined three million yuan (RM1.8 million), Xinhua news agency said.

He was sentenced by a Shenzhen court for “illegally carrying out the human embryo gene-editing intended for reproducti­on”, Xinhua said.

Two of his fellow researcher­s were also sentenced. Zhang Renli was handed a two-year jail term and fined one million yuan while Qin Jinzhou was given 18 months, suspended for two years, and fined 500,000 yuan.

The trio had not obtained qualificat­ions to work as doctors and had knowingly violated China’s regulation­s and ethical principles, according to the court verdict.

They had acted “in the pursuit of personal fame and gain” and seriously “disrupted medical order”, the court said.

Xinhua said a third gene-edited baby was born as a result of He’s experiment­s, which had not previously been confirmed.

He announced in November last year that the world’s first gene-edited babies – twin girls – had been born that same month after he altered their DNA to prevent them from contractin­g HIV by deleting a certain gene under a technique known as CRISPR. The claim raised questions about bioethics and putting a spotlight on China’s lax oversight of scientific research.

He was placed under police investigat­ion, the government ordered a halt to his research work and he was fired by his Chinese university.

Gene-editing for reproducti­ve purposes is illegal in most countries. China’s Health Ministry issued regulation­s in 2003 prohibitin­g gene-editing of human embryos, though the procedure is allowed for “non-reproducti­ve purposes”.

He’s gene-editing meant to immunise the twins against HIV may have failed in its purpose and created unintended mutations, scientists said earlier this month.

He claimed a medical breakthrou­gh that could “control the HIV epidemic”, but it was not clear whether he had even been successful in immunising the babies against the virus because the team did not reproduce the gene mutation that confers this resistance, scientists told the MIT Technology Review. – AFP

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