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Human Rights and Bioethic


Human Rights and Challenges of XXI Century

General Concept:
I. Concept of Human Rights: Human rights are rights inherent to all human beings, whatever our nationality, place of residence, sex, national or ethnic origin, color, religion, language, or any other status[1]. In addition, Human Rights including are also those rights conferred to each one as human being. This clarification permits us to divide natural HR from positive HR.
According to the theory, Positive Rights are rights set up by States with the formal character (written law).
Natural HR are rights inherent to all human beings, whatever our nationality, place of residence, sex, national or ethnic origin, color, religion, language, or any other status. These rights cannot be canceled, modified, or changed buy States. They concern such right to speech, right to though, rights to food, rights to water etc. Without Natural Rights the life becomes impossible.
Positive HR are rights recognized by States (or international community) and conferred to each people in accordance with the law. They consist on rights to work, rights to leisure, rights to payment, etc. 
The most important is that both theories recognize and conferred HR to each people individually as a whole in spite of State’s ideology.
II. Human Rights Challenges
          In the scope of this course “Challenges” are difficulties that addressed mankind in the field of HR and which cannot be resolved only by a State, but require international cooperation.
          International Cooperation is one of the Principles of the International Law recognized by the Charter of United Nations (UN). According to the Charter, one of the main purposes of UN is to achieve international cooperation in solving international problems of an economic, social, cultural, or humanitarian character, and promoting and encouraging respect for all without distinction[2].
          Pursuant to the purposes of UN, principles were established such international cooperation[3], which becomes also an international obligation in the ground of HR.
          We can conclude at first that matters of HR became international issues and secondly for solving them we need international cooperation.
In spite of that HR issues are regulated by national or international legislations, some of them still hardly admitted. Tackling these difficulties relating to HR compulsory requires international cooperation. Such matters are related to problems on Bioethics, Biotechnology, Terrorism, Environment and other currents issues of HR.
          In this scope, HR and Challenges of XXI Century consist on solving international HR rights issues that one State alone is not able to deal with and that  requires international cooperation in many fields as well as politic, economic, social, cultural, security  cooperation etc. These issues may differ from one society to another or involved many States at the same time. For example, solving migration issues in the framework of European Union, priority of environment matters in developing countries, terrorism etc. Thus, one State alone cannot resolve these matters and dealing with them requires cooperation between States.






Unit I HUMAN RIGHTS and BIOETHICS
Concept
Human rights
          a) Human Rights: Human rights are rights inherent to all human beings, whatever our nationality, place of residence, sex, national or ethnic origin, color, religion, language, or any other status . In addition, Human Rights include are also those rights conferred to each one as human being. This clarification permits us to divide natural HR from positive HR.
Natural HR are rights as we already mentioned inherent to all human beings, whatever our nationality, place of residence, sex, national or ethnic origin, color of the skin, religion, language, or any other status. These rights cannot be canceled, modified, or changed buy States. They are included such right to live, right to speech, right to though, rights to food, rights to water etc. Without Natural Rights the life becomes impossible.
Positive HR are rights recognized by States (or international community) and conferred to each people in accordance with the law. They rights to work, rights to leisure, rights to payment, etc.  According to the Theory of State and Law, Positive Rights are rights setup by States with the formal character (written law).
The most important is that both theories recognize and conferred HR to each people individually as a whole in spite of State’s ideology.
Bioethics
In order to understand the concept of Bioethics issues requiring international legal regulation, particularly in human rights we must necessarily know the meaning of Biology and medical sciences as they are interconnected. Commonly Biology is defined as science of life. And for full definition, Biology is a natural science concerned with the study of life and living organisms, including their structure, function, growth, evolution, distribution, and taxonomy. It includes botany and zoology and all their subdivisions[4].
          b) Bioethics: Etymology: Bio at Greek means “life” and ethosbehavior, attitude, moral”.
          Ethics, also known as moral philosophy, is a branch of philosophy that involves systematizing, defending, and recommending concepts of right and wrong conduct[5].
 Philosophers today usually divide ethical theories into three general subject areas: metaethics, normative ethics, and applied ethics.
1. Metaethics investigates where our ethical principles come from, and what they mean. Are they merely social inventions? Do they involve more than expressions of our individual emotions? Metaethical answers to these questions focus on the issues of universal truths, the will of God, the role of reason in ethical judgments, and the meaning of ethical terms themselves.
2. Normative ethics takes on a more practical task, which is to arrive at moral standards that regulate right and wrong conduct. This may involve articulating the good habits that we should acquire, the duties that we should follow, or the consequences of our behavior on others.
3. Finally, applied ethics involves examining specific controversial issues, such as abortion, infanticide, animal rights, environmental concerns, homosexuality, capital punishment, or nuclear war[6] and others issues.
          According to aforesaid, Bioethics are controversial moral concepts arise in biotechnology, Law, Medicine, Politics, Philosophy, Biology and others sciences, because of development or advances of Biologic and Medical sciences. As already mentioned, they concern such problems like the using or production of GMOs, abortion, homosexuality, death penalty as capital punishment, human cloning etc.

I. Historic Background on concept of Bioethics
The term Bioethics was coined and used at first  in 1927 by Paul Max Fritz Jahr, who "anticipated many of the arguments and discussions current in biological research involving animals" in an article about the "bioethical imperative" as he called it, regarding the scientific use of animals and plants[7].
Max Fritz was a Protestant Pastor, Theologian, Educator and Philosopher lived from 18 of January 1895 to October 1953 in Halle (Germany). He Bioethics thesis as said based on moral aspect of biology research and related to it the human being, animals and plants. His opinion was focused on E. Kant’s philosophy which put Human to the center of the Universe in accordance with the concept of the metaphysic. For this reason Max Fritz was recognized as the “father” of the famous popular term “Bioethics” using by current sciences.
Another researcher, who used and developed in 1970s Bioethics was the American biochemist Van Rensselaer Potter. He also used the term with a broader meaning including solidarity towards the biosphere, thus generating a "global ethics", a discipline representing a link between biology, ecology, medicine and human values in order to attain the survival of both human beings and other animal species[8].
Now a day, the using of the term Bioethics involves the whole areas of human activities and even had become according to researchers inter-disciplinary subject for ones and for others, a special scientific discipline. Without taking part to this polemic, for us the most important is how arise matters related to Bioethics in jurisprudence (Law), how is it regulating and which challenges peoples address.

II. Importance of Biological Research
The Biological research has reached an important top and has become one of the most achievements of humanity at last centuries. Biologic research allows in solving a lot of problems faced human being. Many solutions are found for many problems, particularly in the ground of food insufficiencies, medical cure, fighting against criminality, etc.
Right to food is a natural right belonging to everyone. Yet, in the past as now many peoples are continued to suffer of the hungry, particularly in the Developing countries. Many peoples are dead each year because of the lack of supply food. According to Food Agriculture Organization of United Nations (FAO) more than 870 million peoples still are hungry[9].
In this case the Biologic Research becomes an important factor in the way to tackle hunger. It permits plants breeding to increase productions. The using of fertilizers in agriculture and other new technologies become necessarily an important element in realizing of the right to food and related to its others rights.
The medicine achievement at last century is incontestable. The discovering of DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) by using of cells opened more perspectives, opportunities and achievements in the medicine for thousands of peoples. DNA is a molecule encoding the genetic instructions used in the development and functioning of all known living organisms and many viruses. Because of DNA many medical realizations such transplantation, repairing cells and others medical prowess are possible.
          Even some proves during trials have not been possible without DNA manipulations. DNA research and its using by criminology is one of advances of the Biology. Some crimes committed many years ago now can be proved with using of DNA. Origins of some wilds life are known because of using of DNA.
          As conclusion the Biology and medical researches are important factors in solving many problems related to diseases, which a longtime threatened the mankind. Biology researches are solutions to food problem. The world population growth now reaches 7 billion peoples and continues to grow. In this situation the biologic researches in the field of GMOs become one of the challenges for international community. So it is important to encourage biologic actions in these areas by providing legal and material resources.
          Yet, a lot of problems arise in this will to the development. At first the problem concerns the security of the human being regarding the quality of the results of these researches, particularly in food. The second problem refers to the impact of results of biologic manipulations on environment and persons. Third problem consists on limitation of the prowess of biologic researches as they may exceed the human understanding. This last problem calls on to the moral aspect of biologic and medical researches known as BIOETIHICS. 

III. Major issues of bioethics requiring legal regulation
          The world is composed of many politic, social, cultural, religious and economic systems requiring equitable consensus to bioethics issues. Many of these social groups are not in favor to the scientific progresses because of ethics issues.
 Megan-Jane Johnstone referring to Edel and Sikka thinks, that bioethics is culture-bound discourse and, as such, is often inadequate for guiding and remedying ethical disputes underpinning by conflicting cultural values and beliefs about health and human life[10]. For her cultural bioethics is a response to each cultural group to manage the problems of death knows as “Terror management Theory” (TMT).
Bioethics appear in politic live of many countries. For these purposes many politic parties are constituted and known as “Green Parties” or “Ecologist’s Parties”. Generally they are protesting against all kind of introduction of samples GMOs in agriculture and the uses of fertilizers which may have a negative impact on the human health and the environment.
The intervention of biology in different social and cultural life is not always shared opinion. This criticism regard to the religious and cultural conviction of each social group. The criticism is focused on the way researches are conducted and their results.
1. Different Conceptions on Bioethics and HR
          Religion is one of the main reasons of controversies to bioethics. Each religion has its own position to the questions of bioethics. Religious bioethics sometimes completely opposed to the modern secular bioethics. Let analyze the positions of some main world religions such Christian, Islam, Judaism and Buddhism.
          a) Christian Conception on Bioethics and HR
Issues of bioethics are particularly interested scientists at the end of last century and the contemporary time. Bioethics becomes studying object by philosophers, health care holders, lawyers, theologians etc. Many researchers  such Nichola Capaldi, Tristram Engelhard, Megan-Jane Johnstone, Antonio Barbosa da Silva etc. had paid many attentions to the Christian bioethics.    
The Christian Bioethics consists on how Christians according to their faith think about the human’s life, the sexuality, the health care, the medicine, the suffering, the illness, the death, etc.
 To opposition, the now-dominant secular morality is framed in terms of cardinal affirmations of liberty, equality, social justice and human dignity that establish individual decision makers as the source of moral authority and the moral orientation[11].
As said, Megan-Jane Johnstone that the preoccupation of each person is the anxiety of death[12].  n this scope one of aims of religion is to solve this anxiety and help people to die with dignity.
Traditional Christian morality and its bioethics according to Tristram Engelhardt are framed in terms of obligations to God who commands and who is the source of moral authority and the point of moral orientation[13].
The Christian concept of Bioethics is guided by the God’s view of the life. For the Christian, God gives the life and all things related to it. In this way the traditional Christian bioethics forbids human embryonic stem-cell research, abortion, physician-assisted suicide, and euthanasia, while also rejecting any sexual relations outside of the marriage of a man and a woman. It prohibits surrogate motherhood, reproduction using donor gametes, and treatment of sexual dysfunction in homosexual couples[14].
Up to now the Christian bioethics is against the using of pills and condoms, practicing abortions. It considers the health as a God’s gift and  the suffering, the illnesses, the disability and the death as punishment to mankind, particularly for those who do not obey God’s principles and sin.
In this way the secular bioethics regards opposed to the Christian bioethics in the contemporary world. May be it’s the time to the Christendom to review its position about the life care because of its absurdity and archaism. Critics to Christian bioethics now a day are very strong and treat the Christianity as one of the main impeachments to the development. In this case, it is important to underline that the Christianity up to now did not improve the human life by its metaphysic and ethics concepts and continues to remain thousands of peoples in ignorance. Therefore we thank that its time for the Christendom to accept some secular bioethics principles in order to help many peoples to use the benefits of the scientific progresses.
          b) Islam Conception on Bioethics and HR
Islam conception on bioethics is one of the main religious conceptions of bioethics based on Muslims world-views related to “three realities” namely God, Humanity and Cosmos[15]. This concept is one of traditional and conservative  Islam principles of the live. At this way it did not differ from Christian bioethics as it opposed to the current secular view of bioethics.
          For Muslim only Allah (God) is able to provide life and decide about everyone, from the life conception to the death beyond the life. For these purposes any kind of relationship outside of the relation between men and women is unacceptable. Any regulation of procreation is against Allah’s worldview and must be prohibited.
          There is divine Islamic understanding of the human body, which not allowed transplantations of the human organ tissues. As explained Abdulaziz Sachedina, Islam human beings have responsibilities as stewards over the body, which is understood as divine gift, not a private property. This stewardship entails certain Islamic restrictions in the treatment of the body both during mortality and post-mortem to avoid violating prohibitions of desecration and mutilation[16]. For this reason, medical care leading to organs transplantation is viewed as a sin.
          At this last time, because of growing of Islamic radicalism the progress of medicine and biology, the matters related to Islamic bioethics become more and more strong as well as they oppose to the new secular order. Homosexuality, abortion, euthanasia or death assisted, human stem cells researches and other contemporary medical and biological advances are not welcomed into Islamic world.
          As conclusion Islamic bioethics oppose to secular bioethics. This confrontation constitutes an impeachment to the development of the society and new arisen matters related to human rights challenges.
          c) Jewish or Judaism Conception on Bioethics and HR
Judaism is a fundamental Jewish religious that has an important conception on bioethics. If Christian bioethics and Islamic bioethics are radical about the secular bioethics, particularly on understanding of the human being, the life, the suffering, other side, the Jewish bioethics view is more controversial, because it based on different interpretations or commentaries of the “Halachah” made by Rabbinic.
“Halachah” is case or rule-based law of the peoples of Israel based on precedent filtered through Talmudic literature and its commentaries  as well as discussions of specific cases from the past, the responsa literature[17].
Different commentaries of “Halachah” by different Rabbinic open wider worldview on the matters related to bioethics, which can be divided in two groups. The first group concerns are those who supports the traditional Jewish religious view. The second group includes liberal point of view about ethics problems.
The first group is more fundamentalist and refutes all kind of interpretations of the “Halachah” in the favor of the secular understanding of bioethics. For peoples who are supported such point of view, only God gives live and only he might take it. This worldview is expressed in the Bible by the locution “God has given, God has taken” (Jacob 2). There is not too different between their position and those supported by Moslems as we already mentioned who think that our body is God property and we are just the users[18].    
Of course, this position limits physician (doctors) interventions in terms of secular understanding of medicine and rejects all kind of discourses in this scope. This group opposes to the second one.
According to the second group, Jewish bioethics relies on permission to heal in Talmudic statements[19].  Even the Talmud in some cases solves the problem of human clinic experiment by concluding that in situation of a certain danger to life, potential relief may be pursued, despite its own risk[20]. This situation gives a huge possibility for physicians and autonomy of choice for patients.
Again we can conclude that matter of bioethics in Jewish society as previously Christian and Islamic bioethics is subjected to discourses that are no going to be quite soon.
          d) Buddhism Bioethics and HR
          The Buddhism is nontheistic religion which differs from Judaism, Islam, and Christendom. Buddhism can be interpreted as philosophy of harmony between  human being and his surrounding environmental life based on the conduct or behavior of the person in the society. Buddhism principles are known as principles of “the Dhamma” teaching. “The Dahmma teaching contains the main rules of life according to Buddhism that must be observed everyone who believes in it.
          The aim of Buddhism as every religion is to help peoples to manage their life and so to solve the problem of death and suffering. In this way the Buddhism play a particular role in the life of thousands peoples.
          Buddhism bioethics so far is opposed to others religious bioethics but shares with them many points of views as its first percept prohibits the artificial taking of life[21]. As rule, suicide also is not permitted[22]. These rules are fundamental for every person, who practices Buddhism.
          Yet, according to Buddhist norms some practices are allowed in several cases. For example, there are some cases, when taking one’s life to save the others lives allowed. That is known as noble case[23].
Another noble case is suicide to escape from an incurable illness that is an obstacle “nibbana” (painful – my cursor), the final release from the wheel of life and death. Whether there is another exception, which would allow the terminally ill patient to refuse the extraordinary measures for preserving his life or allow a doctor, requested by his patient, to assist the latter to end his life when there is no hope for recovery[24].
Principles of justice, compassion and veracity are other worth of Buddhism. The principle of justice is based on the principle of equality between peoples as fundamental human right that must be respected particularly by the physicians during their work. In terms of veracity principles the doctor must tell only truth to the patient about is disease in opposite to the Greek culture explained by Megan J. Johnstone[25].
In comparison to the others already mentioned religions, Buddhist bioethics is more closer to secular bioethics based on human rights, freedoms and self-determination of each person. There no any compelling to the metaphysic which up to know is not able to give answers about the life, thus continues to remain the mankind in fuzzy (vague) world. To solve these discourses between different societies, juridical norms are setting as agreements at national as international levels known as Law.
2. International mechanism on bioethics
The questions of bioethics are dealing by many international, regional, national and local mechanisms. At international level the issue of bioethics are regulated first of all by the UN and the Council of Europe and their specialized agencies and bodies. At UN level that is the prerogatives of the UNESCO. Ended the UNESCO constitutes a platform for all discussions about bioethics as the Organization is responding for the question of education, sciences  and culture. The International bioethics committee, the Intergovernmental bioethics committee, the Assisting bioethics committee, the World commission on the ethics and the scientific knowledge and technology (COMSET) and the Inter-agency committee on bioethics  are the permanent bodies within the framework of the UNESCO responding for the bioethics issues in the UN system.
International Bioethics Committee (IBC)
Stem cell research, genetic testing, cloning: progress in the life sciences is giving human beings new power to improve our health and control the development processes of all living species. Concerns about the social, cultural, legal and ethical implications of such progress have led to one of the most significant debates of the past century. A new word has been coined to encompass these concerns: bioethics[26].
The International Bioethics Committee (IBC) is a body of 36 independent experts establissed in 1993 in order to follow progress in the life sciences and its applications to ensure the respect for human dignity and freedom.

The main tasks of the IBC
The IBC has the following tasks:
1. To promote reflection on the ethical and legal issues raised by research in the life sciences and their applications.
2. To encourage the exchange of ideas and information.
3. To encourage action to heighten awareness among the general public, specialized groups and public and private decision-makers involved in bioethics.
4. To co-operate with the international governmental and non-governmental organizations concerned by the issues raised in the field of bioethics as well as with the national and regional bioethics committees and similar bodies.
5. To contribute to the dissemination of the principles set out in the UNESCO Declarations in the field of bioethics, and to the further examination of issues raised by their applications and by the evolution of the technologies in question.

Forms of Bioethics Committees
Bioethics Committees can have four forms with different functions:
1. Policy-making and/or Advisory Committee
2. Health-Professional Association Committee
3. Health Care/ Hospital Ethics Committee
4. Research Ethics Committee

3. International regulation of the bioethics
The bioethics is regulated at international level as well as regional level. At international level the regulation of bioethics issues are merely soft (soft law) as there are not binding documents in this area. They include different resolutions, declarations and codes. They are
1. Nuremberg Code of 1947 (WMA)
2. Declaration of Helsinki (1964) (WMA)
3. Universal Declaration on the Human Genome and Human Rights 1997
4. International Declaration on Human Genetic Data 2003
5. Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights 2005
6. United Nations Declaration on Human Cloning 2005
The main reason for what the International Community is not able to draft and adopt internationally binding document is that issues of the bioethics as it was mentioned are very controversial. In this way there is not chance to become to an agreement at international level.
Bioethics issues are also deal at regional level. The main region organization concerning in this ground is the Council of Europe. Its scope of operation is opposite to the Universal system. The Europeans instruments in the ground of bioethics are binding as because they are convention and have force of law for country parties. The main document of regulation of the bioethics and human rights are:
1. Convention for the protection of Human Rights and Dignity of the Human Being with regard to the Application of Biology and Medicine: Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine (Oviedo, 4.IV.1997)
2. Additional Protocol to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Dignity of the Human Being with regard to the Application of Biology and
Medicine, on the Prohibition of Cloning Human Beings (Paris, 12.I.1998)
3. Additional Protocol to the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine
concerning Transplantation of Organs and Tissues of Human Origin (Strasbourg, 24.I.2002)
4. Additional Protocol to the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine,
concerning Biomedical Research Strasbourg, (25.I.2005)
5. Additional Protocol to the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine,
concerning Genetic Testing for Health Purposes *
Strasbourg, 27.XI.2008

The Nuremberg Code of 1947 and Human Rights
Since ancient times, the way experiments are conducted in biologic and medical sciences always provoked many reactions because of lack of ethics principles. In the contemporary time, the horrible discover of medical researches made by Nazi physicians during the World War Two (WWT) required attention of the whole international community and establishment of international Code of conduct known as Nuremberg Code of 1947 by World Medical Association (WMA).
Nazi doctors were involved in experimental scandal on prisoners. They conducted experiments on genetics basis in order to determine the superior race[27]. To know how long human being is able to survive from the cold prisoners were placed into ice cold vat to determine the lowest possible temperature in which a human could survive[28]. More others horrible practices were conducted exceeding the human understanding.
For example, one of the most activist physicians in this inhuman practice was Doctor Joseph Mengele namely “Angel of death”. He was distinguished particularly for his experiments on twins[29]. The experiments were conducted generally for three purposes: first for Medico-military research, second for Miscellaneous, Ad hoc experiments and third for racially Motivated Experiment[30].
          Therefore most of these physicians were convicted by the Special Tribunal Court of Nuremberg of 1947, who worked on the basic of the principles of this Code. These principles became main guidelines of WMA. They consist on ten principles which are:
1. The voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential. This means that the person involved should have legal capacity to give consent; should be so situated as to be able to exercise the free power of choice, without the intervention of any element of force, fraud, deceit, duress, overreaching, or other ulterior form of constraint or coercion; and should have sufficient knowledge and comprehension of the element of the subject matter involved as to enable him to make an understanding and enlightened decision. This latter element requires that before the acceptance of an affirmative decision by the experimental subject there should be made known to him the nature, duration, and the purpose of the experiment; the methods and means by which it is to be conducted; all inconveniences and hazards reasonably to be expected; and the effects upon his health or person which may possibly come from his participation in the experiment. The duty and responsibility for ascertaining the quality of the consent rests upon each individual who initiates, directs, or engages in the experiment. It is a personal duty and responsibility which may not be delegated to another with impunity.
2. The experiment should be such as to yield fruitful results for the good of the society, unprocurable by other methods or means of study, and not random and unnecessary in nature.
3. The experiment should be so designed and based on the result of animal experimentation and knowledge of the natural history of the disease or other problem under study that the anticipated results justify the performance of the experiment.
4. The experiment should be so conducted as to avoid all unnecessary physical and mental suffering and injury.
5. No experiment should be conducted where there is a prior reason to believe that death or disabling injury will occur: except, perhaps, in those experiments where the experimental physician also serve as subject.
6. The degree of risk to be taken should never exceed that determined by the humanitarian importance of the problem to be solved by the experiment.
7. Proper preparation should be made and adequate facilities proved to protect the experimental subject against even remote possibility of injury, disability or death.
8. The experiment should be conducted only by scientifically qualified person. The highest degree of skill and care should be required through all stages of the experiment of those who conduct or engage in the experiment.
9. During the course of the experiment the human subject should be at liberty to bring the experiment to an end if he has reached the physical or mental state where continuation of the experiment seems to him to be impossible.
10. During the course of the experiment the scientist in charge must be prepared to terminate the experiment at any stage, if he has probable cause to believe, in the exercise of the good faith, superior skill and careful judgment require d of him, that a continuation of the experiment is likely to result in injury, disability or death to the experimental subject[31].
          The greatest of the success of the Nuremberg Code is not only in the fields of medical research as concern the obligations of the physician and the social utility of the research, but it is a big achievement in human rights protection. Because the freedom of expression of the experiment subject (patient) is capital (principles 1 and 9). Also his security must be guarantied as well at any stage of experiment.
          Thus, the horrible Nazis practices once included no only massive killing of peoples during the WWT by militaries attacks, but also inhuman practices that required legal regulations of medical experiments and practices confined in the Nuremberg Code of 1947.
          Bioethics as ethic problems arise from the development of biology and medical researches continue to many controversial discourses regardless of the evolution of the human society.
There are political, religious, historic approaches to these discourses. These controversies appeared many times are in contradiction to the new secular bioethics that considers human being, his freedom and rights as fundamentals.
          Therefore in our mind, all kinds of limitations or depravations of fundamental human rights on behalf of these are no only absurd and dated but also unacceptable in regard to fundamental rights recognized by International Bill of Rights and related to it others international agreement in the human rights ground.
          Nuremberg Code again showed us that human right to freedom of choice (consent of the experimental subject) is inviolable and must be respected regardless to bioethics belonging.
          This principles are absolutely important when talking about current understanding of the human rights to his own body and that may be able to help in different choices made by everyone, particularly in the medical issues. Thus, somatic rights of every person must be guarantied.
(For more detail read other aforesaid instruments above)
IV Somatic Human Rights
Concept
Somatic human rights are controversial ideas between those who consider divine character of human being, particularly the perception of human body as God’s property. This conception based on Islamic, Christian, Jewish bioethics is opposite to secular bioethics which proclaims the freedom of each human being on his own body.
The adjective “Somatic” is derivate from the word “somatos” at Greek “body”. Its adjective “somaticos” means pertaining to the body.
In Anatomy and Zoology “somatic” pertaining to the body wall of an animal, Cell Biology and affecting the somatic cells, as distinguished from the germ cells[32].
1. Types of Rights
By type of rights we mean rights recognized to everyone accordingly with International human rights Conventions. In spite of that these rights entitled to each people their enjoyment are very controversial. These problems occurred because o first of all the different existing conception of bioethics and secondly according to different interpretations of international human rights law.
          a. Rights to die / Euthanasia
          The right to die is widely interpreted as right for everyone to decide for his own life as well as recognized by Universal Declaration on human rights: “everyone has the rights to life, liberty and security of his person”[33]. It is seen as a fundamental freedom and for this reason all kind of interferences seemed as a violation of the right to privacy and for this purpose saw as a Civil right[34].
          Talking about the right to die, attorney Robert L. Risley in his book “Death with dignity” points out that in general” court cases clearly established the right to bodily integrity, confirming the basic right of self-determination include the right to die, and that overrides the States duty to preserve life”.
 (Hemlock Society, Eugene, Oregon, 1989, p. viii)[35].
For the supporters of the right to die the right to life entails the right to die and related to it the freedom of choice entitled to every person as recognized by the article 3 of the Universal Declaration of human rights. This position is based on the concept known as “self-ownership” or “the sovereignty of the individual” developed by some philosophers such William Rees-Mogg, James Dale Davidson, L. Susan Brown, and others via “anarchist” and “liberal” theories.
The right to die has interpreted by many jurisdictions at national level. The U.S. Supreme Court addressed the question of whether the U.S. Constitution protects the right to die in 1990 in the case of Cruzan v. Missouri, 497 U.S. 261. In the words of Time magazine, in the case the U.S. the U.S. Supreme Court “declared for the first time that there is indeed a right to die” (July 9, 1990, p. 59)[36]. The right to die is recognized as federal constitutional right. Thus the right to die entails the right to suicide.
The right to die has several meanings including rights to suicide and euthanasia.
The voluntary euthanasia consists on rights to the person at stage of a terminal illness to commit a suicide or to be assisted to die. They include passive and active euthanasia. Active euthanasia occurs, when person is medically assisted to die and passive euthanasia when the patient at the end of illness medically is not supply in order to let him die.
The concept of the “self-ownership” based on secular bioethics. Certain religions like Hinduism and Buddhism accept or agree with the rights to suicide in some cases (for more see Buddhist concept on bioethics).
The voluntary suicide (medically non-assisted) is one’s decision to put end to own life. This kind of suicide is particularly criticized as cruel practice and regard as incapacity of a person to overcome some life difficulties. These peoples concern those regarded as weak persons according to social views, and need psychological help in order to overcome difficulties. These difficulties may relate to the family, problem at work, or any social difficulties. Any way this kind of suicide may regard as exercise of the right to life because never trial someone or put him into jail just because he attempted to his own life. The society only can propose to that person a psychological help for his social adaptation.
Addict cases
b) Right to abortion
At the same time discourses about abortion is considered as suicide (voluntary or involuntary suicide) continuing to run.
Without taking part to different religious discourses about abortion, the opponents to abortion consider it as a murder or crime. The idea is that there is no choice of the fetus as future human being here. For this reason, it is inacceptable to put end to the pregnancy according to the cons.
But the supporters of abortion at first think that the right to give up a baby is individual right of each woman. This freedom of choice cannot be limited. And secondly, one of the main arguments is that the right to abortion compulsory connected to the right to health. This position is confirmed by many decisions of the European court on human rights. Every woman has right to decide about her pregnancy particularly when that affects her health or life. Therefore it is also argued that a woman’s right to decide matters relating to her own body form a part of right to privacy, right to autonomy, right to liberty, right to physical integrity, and right to decide a number and spacing of one’s children[37] as guaranteed by International Bill of rights.
The World Health Organization defines “health” as a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity[38]. International guaranty of right to health (abortion) is invoked in as already mentioned, Universal Declaration of human rights that affirms that “everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself, and of his family, including food, clothing, housing, medical care, and necessary social service”. The same provisions are confirmed in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural rights (art. 12 (1)), International Convention on the Elimination of Forms of Racial Discrimination (art. 5 (e) (iv)), International Convention on the Rights of the Child (art. 24), Convention on the rights of persons with disabilities (art. 25), Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination against Women and others.
The right to health contains both freedoms and entitlements. And freedoms include the rights to control one’s health and body, including sexual and reproductive freedom, and the right to be free from interference, such as the right to be free from torture, non-consensual medical treatment and experimentation[39].
Nonetheless the regulation of matters of pregnancy and abortion are differently regulated at national levels. Abortion is categorically prohibited in some countries. For example, in approximately 70 countries, abortion is not legally permitted where necessary to preserve the physical health of the woman[40].
 The restriction of abortion provokes risk of insecurity and death of hundreds women through the world. Thus, according to World Health Organization, nearly 20 million unsafe abortions took place globally in the year 2003 and 98 % of them took place in developing countries with restrictive abortion laws. As a result of this high global rate of unsafe abortion, every year approximately 70 000 women die and close to five million women suffer from temporary or permanent disability[41].
The question between safety of the abortion and legality is also proved. Romania provides a clear example of the link between legality and safety. From 1957 to 1966, access to abortion was legal and widespread. In 1960, the abortion mortality ratio was 20 per 100 000 live birth. In 1966, access to abortion was legally restricted and by 1989 mortality ratios had risen to 148 death per 100 000 live births with abortion accounting for 87 % of the deaths. In 1989, the law was once again changed to provide for easier and safer access to abortion services. Within a year the mortality ratio fell by more than half and by 2002 mortality from unsafe was as low as nine per 100 000 live births[42].
The right to life and the right to health are two principle arguments that founded the right to abortion. Every person entitled the right to decide what is better for his life and for this reason has the rights to decide to abort particularly when this affects the health of the woman. The right to abortion must not be restricted. For this reason the laws which restrict access to abortion services violate the international rights to health[43]. This kind of restrictions on abortion also constitutes a form of gender-based discrimination[44], as the abortion issues are typically womanly matter.
(Case)
          c) Sexual Right
          The sexual right implies the right for everyone freely to have sexual relationship with others person by his consent. Sexual right as right to abortion is guaranteed to each person by national as international law. According to the International Declaration on Human Rights, men and women of full age, without any limitation due to race, nationality or religion, has have the right to marry and to found a family[45]. This provision is confirmed by the International Covenant of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights[46].
          These provisions hereby include sexual right that entitled to everyone. Nobody can restrict it, exception people who does not reach full age of 18 years. The sexual right involves no only free relationship with someone but also the right to choose freely the partner. Therefore all interferences in one’s partner’s choice (homosexual or heterosexual) constitute no only violation of the sexual right, but also the right to privacy.
          d) Reproductive Right
          Rights to abortion, sexual rights and reproductive right are interconnected.  The reproductive right is one’s rights to decide to have or not children by enjoying sexual right. The reproductive right entitled to each person. People are endowed all legal measures to enjoy their reproductive rights as recognized by the article 10 of universal Declaration of human rights and the article 12 of Covenant of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.
          Every family has the right to decide how many children they want and how many the can adopt. Any restriction cannot be done regard to homosexual or heterosexual family. Everyone has right to enjoy the happiness to found a family as to be parent.
          Reproductive right also poses the problem of the surrogacy for the infertile men, women or families. They entitled also the right to enjoy the happiness to be parent. Therefore, they can be helped by other persons who are able to enfant if these peoples are consents. The decision to become surrogate mother is individual rights implying the right to health and the concept of the bodily “ownership”. All kind of restriction to freedom to enjoyment is a violation to the fundamental human rights.
          e) Right to Change sex
          The right to change sex is governing by the conception of “self-ownership” recognized as fundamental human right. Everyone is free to choose how his want to look like.
This right is the result of the development of the medical science. International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural rights recognizes the right of everyone to enjoy the benefits of the scientific progress and its applications[47]. That is the fact that human rights are no steady. The evolution of the society rises now rights that need to be take into consideration.
          In spite of the social worldview, the right to change sex in the contemporary time is very successful at some part of the world, particularly in the societies where principle of equality between peoples are recognized and guaranteed. That is the case of Thailand where existed special organization namely “Lady Boys”. In the Thailand the Buddhist principles of freedom is more tolerable than other regions in the world. That situation promotes the fully enjoyment of the right to everyone to change his sex.
          The right to change sex also includes the right to health and the freedom for every person to decide about his own health.
          f) Right to own organs and tissues
          The self-ownership” includes on only the right to health but also the right to own organ and tissues. The right to own organs and tissues is one’s right to be Donor or not. The right to own organs and tissues entails three main rights: the right to entrust own organs and tissues to medical research, the right to be donor to someone freely and the right to be donor for commerce purpose.
          The first case occurs when someone at live as after death decides to summit his body or a part of it to the science for experiment. The practice widely spread out through the world.
          The second situation available when one’s freely decides to give some part of his body at life or after the death to another. That may be blood, some tissues, organs, sperms. In this way the surrogacy is fully justified as practiced and must be acceptable.
          The third one consists to sell one’s own organ or tissues for commerce purpose. This practice sometimes is harshly criticize, because of the unwilling of the seller. It means the lack of the freedom of choice. They generally do so because they are poor. The issue on transplantation is widely regulated at european level by the European Convention on the biomedicine.
          e) Right to narcotics and psychotropic substances (drugs)
International cooperation in the field of fighting against narcotics and psychotropic substances opposes the rights to each person to these substances. The matter to free access to drugs continues to entertain chronicles. The supporters of drugs regulation think that the using of drugs threatens no only the person who uses them but the all society. The using of drugs as they think develop crimes, affect people’s health etc.
The argument that drugs affect human health and have some negative influences on the social security is rejected by the supporters of “self-sovereignty” of freedom.
Even peoples are now more and more in favor of the free access to drugs. Many States such Canada, Spain, Switzerland and others already followed these steps establishing special centers for the users. This practice has many advantages than prohibition of drugs using as at first it allows to know who uses it, secondly the possibility to control the quantity, thirdly the possibility to know the origin of drugs, fourth the avoiding illnesses such HIV/AIDS etc. For these reasons and others many specialists think that the liberalization of selling of drugs will resolve more problems than they create[48].
Production, manufacture, traffic and using of drugs are regulated and in the frame of United Nations conventions. There are two main Conventions of UN that regulate the drugs issues. The first Convention concerns the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs of 1961 which was modified in 1971, namely Convention on Psychotropic Substances And then the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances of 1988. These conventions provide classification of drugs in accordance with their danger on human health in the case of their abuse and in accordance to their therapeutic worth.
The drugs are classified in schedules according to their danger. In spite of that some drugs may particularly be danger for human being. These conventions generally do not prohibit their consumption[49]. They only apply to prevent illicit cultivation, production, and manufacture of, and illicit trafficking in and use, of drugs.
To emphasize the provisions of the aforesaid conventions were established special Organs. There are two main Organs which are the Commission on narcotic drugs established in 1948 within the Economic and Social Council of UN and the International Narcotic Control Board (INCB) of 1968 in accordance of the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.
European countries are bounded by UN Conventions in the ground of fighting against drugs. In the frame of the European Union the using of drug is generally prohibited. The countries inside UE are divided in three groups such those countries:
1. Countries completely prohibit consumption of drugs and it may regard as a crime. These countries include France, Sweden, Greece, Finland, and Cyprus. In these countries the legislation may provide imprisonment as sentence.
2. Countries where consumption may qualify as administrative infringement: Portugal, Spain, Luxemburg, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
3. Countries where legislation does not prohibit the using but where detention of sufficient quantity may consider as infringement: Belgium, Denmark, Holland, Italy, Germany, Austria, England, Ireland, Malta, Hungary, Czech-Republic, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia and Romania[50].
          Thus, drug regulations have controversial discourse about the exercising freedom and uses of drugs. Anyway it is important to underline that the existing international Conventions as mentioned do not explicitly condemn the consumption of drug but regulate the production, manufacture, illicit traffic and abuse use. In this scope all kind of restriction may occur only in the purpose to the public order and public heath without infringement to individual freedom.
f) Right to Cloning
The cloning matter belongs to biotechnology issues is developed in the unit titled “Human Rights and Biotechnology”. Thus, in this point we just analyze ethics issues related to enjoyment of rights to cloning.
According to the definition given by the International Convention on Biological Diversity of United Nations of 1992, “Biotechnology means any technological application that use biological systems, living organisms, or derivatives thereof, to make or modify products or processes for specific use[51]”.
 It is important to underline that, biotechnology widely includes the pure biological sciences genetics, microbiology, animal cell culture, molecular biology, biochemistry, embryology, cell biology etc.
The biotechnology implies therapeutic and reproductive cloning engineering. The most important is the possibility for this engineering to product human being and others organs and tissues to transplantations and others medical needs. This approach as other bioethics issues is very controversial.
To solve the problems related to cloning human being was established in 2001 the Committee ad hoc on human cloning in order to make propositions to UN General Assembly[52]. At the end of the work of the Committee ad-hoc, the member agreed with idea that human cloning including human embryonic must be prohibited by international ban[53]. People argue against human cloning because human dignity must be protected.
The human rights issues through such prohibition consist on the restriction of human freedoms that are considered as fundamentals. For certain peoples this restriction infringes existing human rights agreements.
The Universal Declaration on human rights (UDHR) guarantees the rights to found a family and protect the family as a sphere of privacy[54].
The right to decide freely and responsibly on the number of and spacing between children is also recognized by the International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discriminations against Women of 1979[55].
The freedom of scientific research and uses of the benefits of scientific progresses are also guaranteed by International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural rights of 1966[56] and other many international documents that protected individual, freedom, rights to health etc.
For us the problem must have another regulation taking in account the matters that can arise from the cloning. These problems as concerned related to advantages and damages that human cloning can cause respectively.
1. About the advantages it is important to underline the benefits for infertile men, women, and couples. As human being they are entitled all rights to enjoy the progress of scientific progresses, particularly the medicine. The right to enjoy happiness as parent must be guaranteed if human cloning can provide them this happiness.
2. The another problem is the benefits of cloning by avoiding some genetic diseases that not exists any solution to care.
3. The human cloning can help to avoid mother mortality as we already mentioned in the part “reproductive right”. That can be the respond to the thousands death that occur during childbirth.
4. The human cloning can be necessary to avoid some sexual transmissible diseases as HIV/AIDS and others.
5. The human cloning can be a solution to violence in the family, example for those who want to live alone but having right to child.
The danger to human cloning acceptable is more procedural than ethical. Because can rises some problem that regulation must be out of control.
1. The cloning technic by medical companies is more supplied by private pharmaceutical companies than public sectors. There arise the problems of control and limit on cloning engineering.
2. The other matter that can occur is the accessibility of this technology in practice. As we now it is very expensive process that can be accessible only for rich country. In this way the developed countries should be once marginalized.
3. A part from technology access, there also problem to access to the result of cloning technic that will be also expensive and accessible only rich peoples.
So the advantages and disadvantages are multiple. The enjoyment of freedoms can be restricted only in the cases where the enjoyment infringes freedoms of other peoples, but not on the individual or social feeling. And in the case the human embryonic cloning does not infringe freedoms of others. Human embryonic cloning is not compulsory for everyone but for those who should be in need.
At the end of ours analyzes on human rights and bioethics we can conclude that the scientific evolution is a real fact. This evolution involves all the spheres of human life. The evolution of the science implies also enjoyment of human rights, human freedoms and dignity.
Yet, the exercise or enjoyment of the scientific results is appreciated differently because of social, political, economical, cultural views of peoples. This worldview divides the contemporary world into two camps. The first group as concerned includes the secular view of the world and share of the benefits of scientific progress without any restriction to enjoyment of the human freedoms. The second group implies the traditional conception based on the fear of the future.
To deal with this opposition, social dialog and agreements are necessary, but not enough. Because the evolution of the society implies news possibilities and new rights that can be suddenly accepted by others members of the society. Fifty years ago it was impossible to talk about rights of LGBT peoples. But now countries start recognize them and are taking measure for their protection and enjoyment. Therefore we think that the time is the best remedy to address bioethics issues.



[1] http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Pages/WhatareHumanRights.aspx
[2] Article 1, (1) of the UN Charter of 1945.
[3] UN Document. A/RES/2625 (XXV): Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations at 24 of October 1970.
[4] http://www.bio.txstate.edu/~wetlands/Glossary/glossary.html
[5] http://www.iep.utm.edu/ethics/
[6] ibid
[7] Lolas, F. (2008). Bioethics and animal research: A personal perspective and a note on the contribution of Fritz Jahr. Biol. Res.. 2008;41(1):119-23
[8] Goldim, J. R. (2009). Revisiting the beginning of bioethics: The contributions of Fritz Jahr (1927). Perspect Biol Med, Sum, 377-380.
[9] http://faostat3.fao.org/home/index.html
[10] Megan-Jane Johnstone, Bioethics, Cultural Differences and the Problem of Moral Disagreement in End-Of-Life Care: A Terror Management Theory. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, April 4, 2012, 37: 181-200.
[11] Tristram Engelhardt, Christian Bioethics after Christendom: Living in a Secular Fundamentalist Policy and Culture. Oxford Journals Humanities & Medicine  Christian Bioethics Volume 17, Issue 1Pp. 64-95.
[12] ibid
[13] Tristram Engelhardt, Christian Bioethics after Christendom: Living in a Secular Fundamentalist Policy and Culture. Oxford Journals Humanities & Medicine  Christian Bioethics Volume 17, Issue 1Pp. 64-95.
[14] ibid
[15] God, Life, and the Cosmos: Christian and Islamic perspectives. By Ted Peters, Muzaffar Iqbal and Syed Nomanul Haq. Journal of Islamic studies (January 2006) 17 (1): 68-71.
[16] Islamic Biomedical Ethics. By Abdulaziz Sachedina. Oxford University press, 2009. 280 p.
[17] Jewish Bioethics by Mark Levin and Ira Birnbaum. Journal of medicine and philosophy 2000, Vo. 25, 4,pp. 469-484.
[18] Islamic Biomedical Ethics. By Abdulaziz Sachedina. Oxford University press, 2009. 280 p.
[19] Noam J. Zohar, Human action and God’s Will: A problem of Consistency In Jewish Bioethics. The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, Bar LLan University, Ramat Gan, Israel. 20: 387-402, 1995
[20] Marl Levin and Ira Birnbaum, Ibid.
[21] Pinit Ratanakul. Bioethics in Thailand: The Struggle for Buddhist Solutions. The journal of Medicine and Philosophy, Research Center of Southeast Asian Culture, 13 (1988), 301-312.
[22] Ibid
[23] Ibid
[24] Ibid
[25] Megan-Jane Johnstone, Bioethics, Cultural Differences and the Problem of Moral Disagreement in End-Of-Life Care: A Terror Management Theory. The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, April 4, 2012, 37: 181-200.
[26] http://www.unesco.org/new/en/social-and-human-sciences/themes/bioethics/about-bioethics/
[27] Mustafa Khidir  Mustafa Elnimeiri, Nuremberg Code: A Landmark document on medical research ethics, Sudanese Journal of Public Health: April 2008, Vol.3 (2).
[28] Ibid
[29] Ibid
[30] Ibid
[31] Ibid.
For more information see: The Nuremberg Code (1947) In: Mitscherlich A, Mielke F. Doctor of infamy: The story of the Nazi medical crimes. New York: Schuman, 1949: Also available online from http:/www.cirp.org/library/ethics/nuremberg
[32] American HeritageMedical Dictionary
[33] Article 3 of United Nations’ Universal Declaration of human rights of 1948.
[34] Suicide: A Civil Right, by Lawrence Stevens, J.D. www.antipsychiatry.org/suicide.htm
[35] Lawrence Stevens, J.D., Ibid.
[36] Lawrence Stevens, J.D., Ibid.
[37] Ronli Sifris, Restrictive Regulation of Abortion and the Right to Health. Medical Law Review, 18, Spring 2010, pp 185-212.
[38] Ronli Sifris, Ibid.
[39] Ronli Sifris, Ibid.
[40] Ronli Sifris, Ibid.
[41] Ronli Sifris, Ibid.
[42] Ronli Sifris, Ibid.
[43] Ronli Sifris, Ibid.
[44] Ronli Sifris, Ibid.
[45] Article 16.1
[46] Article 10.1
[47] Article 15. 1 (b).
[48] http://jankrepelka.com/p/legalize.pdf
[49] http://association-marilou.org/20/doc/News/OFDT_102011.pdf
[50] http://association-marilou.org/20/doc/News/OFDT_102011.pdf
[51] Article 2.
[52] United Nations General Assembly, 28 January 2002, UN Doc.: A/RES/56/93.
[53] Report of the Ad-Hoc Committee on an international Convention against the reproductive cloning of human beings, 25 February to 1 March 2002, General Assembly Official records, 57th Session, Supplement number: 51 (A/57/51, Paragraph 11-13).
[54] Article 12, 16(1)
[55] Article 16, 1(e).
[56] Article 15,3.


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