Cyprus clinic at center of human  egg trafficking probe
| FEATURE | 
ZYGI — They may never see the light of day but Maria is not abandoning her Cypriot “children,” embryos that were seized after the fertility clinic where they were conceived in vitro was closed on suspicion of human egg trafficking.
Petra House, a large stone building near the fishing village of Zygi that housed the clinic in southern Cyprus, has been empty since mid-May when it was abandoned by its medical staff, mostly Russians.
“The  staff have disappeared and the fate of our embryos is a mystery,” said  Maria, an Italian who came to Cyprus for treatment and would not give  her real name because of the investigation into the allegations.
“We  cannot entrust our own lives to people without scruples, who play  around with embryos and gametes as if they were toys,” she said.
Like other foreign patients, Maria and her husband were hoping the clinic’s bank of gametes — eggs and sperm — could help them start a family.
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100923com3.html

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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