Clone Doc's Sex Cult



December 28, 2002

DRESSED from head to toe in figure-hugging black, baby-clone doctor Brigitte Boisselier strutted between 17 nervous ‘initiates' to her sex cult.

The ten men and seven women gathered at a remote farmhouse on the 2,000-acre estate of Sir Richard Glyn near Wimborne in Dorset.

And by the flickering light of candles and the booming sound of whale song, the prospective converts to the Raelian movement, in which Brigitte is a ‘bishop', were coaxed into sharing and exploring their darkest fantasies.

This is the same woman who, on Friday afternoon, made the shattering announcement that her Clonaid operation, a medical offshoot set up by the Raelian cult, was responsible for the birth of the world's first cloned baby. She said a 7lb girl named Eve was delivered on Boxing Day morning.

Again, she was dressed in black, right down to her ribbed tights.

If her claims are verified, reputable scientists say it will open a Pandora's Box of mutant horrors and designer children.

The Raelians, led by Brigitte's svengali Claude Vorhilon, believe alien experimenters created the human race 25,000 years ago using DNA technology. The cult preaches the power of group sex and asks for up to 10 per cent of members' earnings after tax to help build an ‘alien embassy'.

Flushed

At the Glyn estate Brigitte took huge delight in listening to her flock describe their sexual urges.

First she led a meditation session, ordering novices—including an undercover News of the World reporter—to lie on the ground, eyes shut. Walking between the bodies she intoned: "Imagine your souls are contained in balls of energy...now imagine that ball moving upwards and then through space."

Soon afterwards came a separate ‘sex energy' lesson in one of Sir Richard Glynn's barn lofts. The landowner is not a member of the sect but allows his estate to be used by them.

In the loft each member was told to write down his or her most intimate fantasies. A woman in her twenties was picked by one of Brigitte's aides to read out hers first.

Caught between obeying her instructions and deep embarrassment, she obeyed falteringly, flushing a deep red: "I imagine myself being dominated. Not by one man, but by three or four at the same time...one by one they take me...I am naked and submissive."

Brigitte never took her eyes off the woman. The rest of the group squirmed, knowing their ordeal would come.

The £120 course in May 1997 was jointly run by Brigitte and Swiss-born Gerard Jeandupeux.

Gerard leered at our reporter: "It's a shame there aren't more women here. You can't have fun with just a handful." He added later: "If you feel like having a sensual or sexual experience with one or several others, whatever sex, do what you want as long as they agree." Gerard also told our man he could be invited to a bizarre cross-dressing ball in Switzerland. "Men dress as women and wear stuffed bras, and the women dress as men and wear moustaches and play the man role," he said.

"Women are expected to proposition the men and initiate having sex with them."

Brigitte's Raelian master, Claude Vorhilon, insists he met an alien called Yaweh Elohim on an extinct volcano in 1973.

The being, which was apparently olive-skinned and had a wispy beard, gave Claude the name Rael, meaning messenger. He was given a mission to prepare for the aliens' return to Earth, with a deadline of 2035.

His cult, which has an annual turnover of around £5million, now claims 1,000 members in Britain and 55,000 wordwide. Vorhilon himself is a multi-millionaire with a passion for motor racing. In a copy of his book, Extra Terrestrials Took Me To Their Planet, that we obtained at the time, Vorhilon says: "Children should be taught to have sex purely for pleasure without any emotional commitment to the sexual partner."

He adds: "Women particularly should have sex with one or more individuals of either sex as long as those individuals agree, since contraception has freed women from fear of pregnancy...

Threesomes

"Sect members should, at the same time encourage those they love to seek sexual gratification with others. Sect members should also continue to sexually gratify a loved one who does not oppose them having sex with others.

"Sect members should also not reject but have sex with another person if that person wants to gratify them sexually.

"Sect members can have heterosexual, homosexual and bisexual sex in couples, threesomes, foursomes and ‘moresomes'." The sect's HQ in Canada is called UFOland—complete with a replica of the flying saucer Vorhilon insists he saw.

Raelians flock to the site for ‘free love' orgies. In 1992, hundreds more devotees gathered in a field in rural France.

Cloning scientist Brigitte announced on Friday that the Raelians' first cloned baby, Eve, was delivered by Caesarean section at 11.55am on December 26. The mother is said to be a 31-year-old American.

US offshoot company Clonaid apparently began human cloning last spring with 10 implants, five of which were "terminated spontan-eously", French-born Brigitte claims.

She told a Miami press conference: "Five others were successful and are still successful...the next one is due in Europe next week so it's very close and the three others will be born by the end of January, maybe early February."

In his book, Vorhilon suggests that a huge bank of members' DNA is being built up. He urges Raelians to "arrange that on their death, one square centimetre precisely of the bone from their forehead, 33 millimetres above the middle axis between their pupils, is sent to the (Raelian) Embassy for re-creation purposes."

Cloning babies involves making an exact replica of the mother by taking DNA from one cell, implanting it in a ‘hollowed-out' egg and bombarding it with chemicals and electricity. No male sperm is involved.

Evidence

The procedure is illegal in Britain, Western Europe and the US, but there are around 170 nations where it is not banned.

Brigitte provided no hard evidence of the clone-birth, insisting that independent evidence would be provided after the baby emerged from hospital in three days.

Many scientists are sceptical, but British expert Dr Patrick Dixon said that if it is the case: "2003 will go down as the Year of the Clone—when humankind realised that science is running out of control."

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