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‘Rotterdam scientist contributed to dubious Chinese DNA study’

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A member of Erasmus MC’s academic staff was involved in a study using DNA samples taken from Uighurs, an oppressed Muslim ethnic minority in China. This was reported by The New York Times. The newspaper says it has serious grounds for believing that DNA was collected from hundreds of donors without their consent.

Image by: Ronald van den Heerik

In the study, researchers attempt to digitally reconstruct an individual’s face based on his or her DNA. At some point, the Chinese government could feed these images into its mass surveillance system – allowing Beijing to tighten its grip on dissidents, protesters and ethnic minorities even further.

Chinese police

One of the experts involved in this research is Liu Fan PhD, a Chinese researcher and professor at the Beijing Institute of Genomics. These past few years, Dr Fan has also held an assistant professorship at Erasmus MC. He started at the Chinese institute in 2015, when he was already in EUR’s employment. Two months later, Dr Fan signed an agreement with the Chinese police relating to research into this form of technology.

An Erasmus MC spokesperson informed The New York Times that Liu Fan’s position in China was “totally independent” of his work in Rotterdam. Erasmus MC added that Liu had not received any funding from the institution for this research, nor could the Rotterdam university be held responsible “for any research that has not taken place under the auspices of Erasmus”.

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Comments

1 reactie

  1. Nathan de ARRIBA-SELLIER op 5 December 2019 om 15:13

    It’s not about Erasmus MC’s responsibility but ethics! Mr Fan should be dismissed immediately.

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