Posted on 03/30/2005 1:41:12 AM PST by happinesswithoutpeace
Clerics slow measles fight
U.S. shots termed anti-Muslim plot
KANO, Nigeria Accusations by Islamic preachers that vaccines are part of an American anti-Muslim plot are threatening efforts to combat a measles epidemic that has killed hundreds of Nigerian children, health workers say.
Government officials play down the anti-vaccine sentiment, but all the measles deaths have been in Nigerias north, where authorities had to suspend polio immunizations last year after hard-line clerics fanned similar fears of that vaccine.
Nigeria, whose 130 million people make it Africas most populous nation, has recorded 20,859 measles cases so far this year.
At least 589 victims have died, most of them children younger than 5 the Nigerian Red Cross and the U.N. World Health Organization say.
Southern Nigeria, which is mainly Christian, had only 253 measles cases, and no deaths.
Health services are much better in the south. But the anti-vaccination sentiment in the north, evident from interviews with parents, seems to be a factor.
Since the polio controversy, I have not presented any of my children for immunization because my husband said I should not, said Ramatou Mohammed, who was at Abdullahi Wase Hospital seeking treatment for her baby, Miriam, for a measles rash.
I heard on the radio that the vaccine was contaminated. I still dont trust any vaccine, the 28-year-old mother of four added.
Her views were echoed by others in the waiting room at the hospital in Kano, which is in the worst-hit state, with nearly 7,000 cases, including 155 deaths, since Jan. 1.
In 2003, Islamic clerics claimed the United States was using polio vaccinations to sterilize Muslims or contaminate them with the AIDS virus.
They ordered a boycott in messages disseminated from mosques, in radio broadcasts and by door-to-door campaigning.
The U.S. Embassy called the claims absolutely ridiculous.
But three powerful state governors in the north joined the polio boycott, and it dragged on 11 months before authorities persuaded the governors in July to accept vaccine bought from the predominantly Muslim nation of Indonesia.
By then the number of polio cases in Nigeria had risen fivefold, and the crippling disease had spread to nine other African countries where it previously had been eradicated.
Now there are fears the anti-vaccine sentiment could also affect the measles outbreak.
Last year, WHO recorded 24,363 Nigerian measles cases from January to September. That is not many more than this year, and officials say some states have not yet reported cases for March, which is generally the peak of measles season.
A big surge would be a blow to WHO, which had hoped to bring measles under control this year. Across Africa, measles deaths fell from 873,000 in 1999 to just more than 500,000 or half the global total in 2003, according to the U.N. health agencys most recent statistics.
Some clerics have added the measles vaccine to their campaign against immunizations.
Nasir Mohammed Nasir, imam of Kanos second-largest mosque, said Americans cant be killing my brothers and children in Iraq and at the same time claim to want to save my children from polio and other diseases.
We suspect a sinister motive, he said.
In Washington, the State Departments deputy spokesman, Adam Ereli, said such allegations are crazy, outlandish, unfounded.
HO-KAY! Forego the vaccines then. It was nice knowin' ya.
Yes. Sometimes you just have to just give people what they want.
Absolutely stunning stupidity and ignorance from TROP garbage.
True, but I prefer dubbing it TARP-- The Alleged Religion of Peace...
Ergo, Muslim Nigerians don't care if their kids get potentially lethal measles because it's more important to their parents to feed their anti-Western paranoia. Stupid is as Islam does.
I assume they must also be having a stupidity epidemic. Maybe they can develop a vaccine for that condition.
Nice, b.
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