But Malacca Chief Minister Mohamad Ali Rustam said the lab had received state approval, and animal testing was necessary to make drugs. The project is still in the planning phase. "God created animals for the benefits of human beings. That's why he created rats and monkeys ... We cannot test on human beings," he said. "This is the way it has to be. God created monkeys, and some have to be tested."

He said Malaysian agencies, such as the wildlife department, could monitor that the animals were not abused and proper procedures followed. He said eating animals could also be seen as cruel, and yet it was widely accepted. Vivo inked a 450 million ringgit ($141 million) joint-venture deal in January to build the biotechnology centre, including laboratories where trial medicines will be tested on animals. Its partners are state government-owned Melaka Biotech Holdings and local firm Vanguard Creative Technologies.
In a joint statement last month, Malaysia's Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection and the European Coalition to End Animal Experiments decried the project because Malaysia has no laws protecting the welfare of animals used in experiments. The group opposed the proposed facility for "both ethical reasons and the lack of scientific validity of using animals in testing."
3 comments:
How does he know what God's thinking process was? Geez... pretty arrogant.
Ugh...I hate it when people say, "God said it was okay!" How the hell do you know?
Isn't that what pretty much every religion at least implies?
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