The scientist who announced the birth of the first human clone last week says a second infant will be born this weekend.
Ms Brigitte Boisselier, the head of Clonaid which claims to have produced the baby, told the Belgian VTM-Nieuws broadcast that "the child that will be born is a girl, from a lesbian couple".
When asked whether it was in Europe she said it would happen "not very far from here".
An official at the Belgian branch of the Raelian sect, to which Clonaid is linked, said later the country concerned was the Netherlands.
Ms Boisselier says the parents of the second baby want to remain anonymous.
Clonaid has refused to offer any proof that the child it says was born last week is a clone. But the company has promised DNA test results to confirm its claim.
Clonaid, which declines to say where its facilities are, was founded in the Bahamas in 1997 by the man who founded the Raelian religious sect. The man, Rael, says he learned about the origin of life on Earth from a visitor from outer space. He says he views cloning as a step toward reaching eternal life.
Clonaid retains philosophical but not economic ties to the Raelians, the company says.