HONG KONG: The disgraced Chinese scientist who created the world’s first genetically altered babies has received a “top talent” visa to work in Hong Kong.
He Jiankui, a researcher who drew widespread condemnation worldwide when he revealed his experiment in 2018, was granted the work permit in early February under the territory’s newly launched Top Talent Pass programme.
At a press briefing on Tuesday in Beijing, He said he plans to explore potential opportunities to work in Hong Kong on gene therapies for rare diseases.
“I am currently contacting Hong Kong’s universities, research institutions and companies,” He said. “If there are confirmed, suitable opportunities, I will consider coming to work in Hong Kong.”
In 2019, He was sentenced to three years in prison. He was given a lifelong ban on working in reproductive technology and fined 3 million yuan ($436,380) by a Chinese court for “illegal medical practice”.
He’s previous work, when he edited the genes of embryos to create babies that were resistant to the virus that causes Aids, was sharply criticised by the international scientific community. It was denounced as an abuse of the newly emerging gene-engineering tools and methods that still aren’t fully understood.
He recruited couples with HIV who didn’t want to pass the disease to their offspring for his experimental work. Two women become pregnant and three gene-edited babies were born.
Visa risk
The renewed controversy tied to the discredited scientist risks tainting the high-profile policy that Hong Kong’s leaders crafted to counter a talent exodus. Since 2020, tens of thousands of people have left the city after pandemic curbs and national security laws restricted activities.
Hong Kong started the new visa programme on Dec 28. More than 10,000 applications have been filed to date and at least 7,700 were approved, the Hong Kong Economic Times reported last week.
The visa scheme “seeks to attract top talents with rich work experience and good academic qualifications from all over the world to explore opportunities in Hong Kong”, according to the website for Hong Kong’s Immigration Department.
An applicant should meet normal immigration requirements including being “of clear criminal record and raise no security or criminal concerns” to Hong Kong, it says.
Chris Sun, Secretary for Labour and Welfare, told reporters on Tuesday that applicants under the scheme currently aren’t required to provide their criminal records.
Authorities review and adjust the procedure from time to time, he said, declining to comment on an individual case.
Sun added that any false statements in application could lead to visas being revoked.
He Jiankui is currently working with artificial intelligence technology to bring down the cost of gene therapies, a different approach to treating harmful mutations in a person’s genetic makeup. The researcher said he is aware of the attention surrounding his efforts and vowed to follow the law, as well as moral and international consensus.
“I plan to organise an international ethics advisory committee to review my future scientific research projects and ensure openness and transparency,” he said in response to media questions.