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Egyptian Sailor Dies in Brazil From Anthrax- Brazil Police
Reuters ^ | April 28, 2003

Posted on 04/28/2003 10:28:14 AM PDT by Shermy

BRASILIA, Brazil (Reuters) - A crew member of an Egyptian merchant ship has died in northern Brazil, almost certainly from anthrax, after opening a suitcase suspected of containing the substance which he was taking to Canada.

A spokesman for Brazilian federal police in the Amazon state of Para said on Monday an autopsy of the Egyptian man, whom he named as Ibrahim Saved Soliman Ibrahim, showed that he had died after vomiting, internal bleeding and multiple organ failure.

"He was the victim of anthrax," said Castro, adding that police were 90 percent certain that Ibrahim had died of anthrax.

Ibrahim died in the hotel were he was staying on April 11. Several health workers who found his body were taken to a hospital after becoming ill but are now out of danger.

Ibrahim had traveled to Brazil from Cairo to join his ship, the Wabi Alaras, which loaded bauxite in the Amazon to take to Canada.

"We imagine that this is about bioterrorism and Brazil was just used as a point of transfer," said Castro.

Ibrahim died before his ship sailed to Canada, where it was quarantined by authorities last week.

Canada was alerted about the ship through Interpol.

Castro said Ibrahim had been given the suitcase in Cairo by an unidentified person and was due to deliver it to somebody in Canada. But he doubted Ibrahim knew what the content of the bag was otherwise he most likely would not have opened it.

"He opened it because he was curious," Castro said.

After the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, five people died in still-unsolved anthrax mailings.


TOPICS: Anthrax Scare; Breaking News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: alara; anthrax; antraz; attack; bioterror; brazil; canada; canadaanthrax; egypt; sailor; southamerica; suitcase; terror; wabi; wabialaras
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To: Shermy; Badabing Badaboom
I think that's the first Canadian report I've seen to mention the hemorrhaging. Once you combine the hemorrhaging with the fact that anthrax bacilli were found in the body, the conclusion that he died of inhalational anthrax is inescapable. Maybe the Canadian public is about to learn the truth.
81 posted on 04/28/2003 12:18:49 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: Shermy
My Spanish is too rusty to translate all but the basics....I got the internal bleeding/anthrax/11 days/bound for Canada.....but that's the jist, lol! : )
82 posted on 04/28/2003 12:19:53 PM PDT by nicmarlo
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To: Badabing Badaboom; Wallaby; Matt Drudge; drudge; Nita Nupress; Uncle Bill; thinden; MizSterious; ...
It is positively frighening that our useless media didn't pick this up. This is the most dynamite story of the year.

I'll bet the clean-up team is enroute to keep this story under wraps. I wonder which hotel the mule died in. The health care workers had to come in contact with anthrax in his room, since anthrax isn't contagious, right?

83 posted on 04/28/2003 12:20:01 PM PDT by Fred Mertz
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Comment #84 Removed by Moderator

To: sheikdetailfeather
That is scary.

Scarier still is that you're likely to die of something you've never considered or at a time your never thought likely ...

85 posted on 04/28/2003 12:20:34 PM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: aristeides
Once you combine the hemorrhaging with the fact that anthrax bacilli were found in the body

SOUNDS like gastro-intestinal - NOT inhalation anthrax ...

"Bad Beef" from a foreign country ...

86 posted on 04/28/2003 12:22:16 PM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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Comment #87 Removed by Moderator

To: FairOpinion
And it's very lucky for us, he opened it. It was probably being taken to Canada, to be smuggled into the US from there.

Then this guy is a silent hero.

88 posted on 04/28/2003 12:22:24 PM PDT by JustPiper (Womb to Tomb! Birth to Earth!!!)
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To: twigs
Wonder if the suitcase got deliverd and if it went to Toronto?
89 posted on 04/28/2003 12:22:54 PM PDT by knak
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Comment #90 Removed by Moderator

To: _Jim
Several of the reports speak of hemorrhaging in the lungs.
91 posted on 04/28/2003 12:24:13 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: Badabing Badaboom
also transports toxins to the

THAT'S the effect that kills - the toxins. Gastro-intestinal is rarely fatal too ...

92 posted on 04/28/2003 12:25:15 PM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: Battle Axe
I think they were loading the ship's cargo of bauxite in the town where Ibrahim died, Porto Trombetas. Reports differ about whether he died on board the ship or in a hotel in town.
93 posted on 04/28/2003 12:25:47 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: aristeides
From a Google search on: inhalational anthrax "last case"

http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/anthrax/disease_rec.html

The last case of inhalational anthrax in the United States, before 2001, was in 1976 in California. A home craftsman died of the disease. He was exposed through his work with yarn; Bacillus anthracis was isolated from some of the imported yarns used by the patient.

94 posted on 04/28/2003 12:27:04 PM PDT by _Jim (Guangdong doctor linked as source of SARS in China: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030320/09/)
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To: aristeides
See # 46.

Ibrahim may not have got to the ship at all, thereby nothing might be found on the ship.

Unclear for now.

95 posted on 04/28/2003 12:27:23 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: Shermy
Egyptian Ship Tested For Anthrax Off Nova Scotia Coast

HALIFAX (AP)--Infectious disease experts spent five hours taking swabs of living quarters and interviewing crew members after boarding a ship quarantined off the coast of Nova Scotia to search for traces of anthrax early Saturday.

Six specialists, armed with protective suits, masks and jugs of bleach, inspected the Wadi Al Arab, an Egyptian vessel anchored about 10 kilometers offshore.

They completed their search in the afternoon after taking swab samples from the 225-meter-long ship's cabins, living quarters, galley and bridge to determine if the vessel is contaminated with the lethal bacterial disease.

The team of quarantine and environmental officers also spoke with the ship's captain and all 30 crew members.

"It's just what we expected. Everyone is in extremely good health," Tracey Taweel, a Health Canada spokeswoman, said Saturday evening.

"There have no illnesses with the crew and they were exceptionally cooperative in terms of welcoming our team on board and allowing them to do the work they needed to get done."

The Egyptian vessel was placed under a one-kilometer exclusion zone when it arrived near the mouth of the Halifax harbor early Friday. That prevents anyone from leaving the ship or any other boats from getting near it.

Canadian officials will keep the bulk carrier out at sea until they can determine whether there are traces of the bacteria, which is suspected to have caused the death of the ship's chief officer, Ibrahim Sayed Ibrahim, about 10 days ago in Brazil.

They likely won't have the test results from the lab in Halifax until late Monday or Tuesday, Taweel confirmed. The ship would be released if it was cleared of anthrax or any other communicable disease.

"We're in a bit of a holding pattern at this point," she said. "We just have to wait until we hear back from the lab about the results."

A specialist with the Brazilian Health Department said the anthrax bacilli were discovered in the man's body after he died while the ship was off Brazil. However, a conclusive autopsy report had yet to be completed.

"The bacilli of anthrax was found in his body," Carlos Lopes told The Canadian Press from Brasilia, the capital of the South American country. He said it wasn't clear if the traces came from external sources or if they caused the death.

Lopes said the results of a second autopsy were expected to be available Tuesday.

Ibrahim died of septicemia, a generalized infection that spread quickly, said Luiz Malcher, the chief coroner of the port city of Belem in Brazil, on Sunday.

Septicemia occurs when toxins from the bacteria enter the blood stream and do damage to the organs.

He said there was strong hemorrhaging of the lungs, pancreas and brain, a symptom consistent with anthrax poisoning.

The ship was headed to an Alcan Inc. smelter on the Saguenay River in Quebec, but was diverted to Nova Scotia after it was learned Ibrahim might have died from anthrax, an infection that usually afflicts sheep and cattle, but which is transmissible to humans.

Officials know very little about what happened to Ibrahim, said to be an Egyptian in his 50s who was part of a crew change just days before he died. It is thought he died after the Wadi Al Arab left a Brazilian port about two weeks ago. His body was removed and the vessel was sanitized.

Malcher said Ibrahim had started feeling ill about seven hours after boarding the ship.

"He was found dead early the next morning," he said. "Before boarding Ibrahim was submitted to routine medical examinations and was found to be in perfect health, so it would seem that the infection occurred on board."

The ship, a 37,550-ton carrier, is owned and operated by National Navigation of Egypt.

Ibrahim traveled from Cairo and stayed in a hotel in Brazil while he waited for the Wadi Al Arab to arrive. His body was returned to Egypt after the autopsy, a federal official said.

Dr. Douglas Sinclair, an emergency medicine specialist at the IWK Grace Hospital in Halifax, said the disease acts quickly and usually presents symptoms when it is too late to treat.

"Patients get very, very sick before it's recognized," he said, adding that it is not contagious. "It's fairly potent."

It is transmissible to humans through anthrax spores, which killed several people in the U.S. following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in 2001.

Dow Jones Newswires 04-28-031341ET

96 posted on 04/28/2003 12:27:32 PM PDT by knak
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To: aristeides
Castro said Ibrahim had been given the suitcase in Cairo by an unidentified person and was due to deliver it to somebody in Canada. But he doubted Ibrahim knew what the content of the bag was otherwise he most likely would not have opened it.

Did Ibrahim tell them about the origin and destination of the suitcase before he died, or did someone else? Is the person to whom he was to deliver it in Canada also "unidentified?"

97 posted on 04/28/2003 12:28:27 PM PDT by browardchad
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To: Shermy
I'm thinking it may be necessary to post this here, Shermy.....for some reason, I have a funny feeling the link to the Spanish site will disappear.....soon (besides, perhaps some FReepers who can read Spanish better can translate this, word for word):

IMEDIATO EGÍPCIO DE EMBARCAÇÃO ESTRANGEIRA MORREU DE HEMORRAGIA INTERNA DIA 11 EM PORTO TROMBETAS

O superintendente da Polícia Federal do Pará, Geraldo Araújo, disse ser grande a possibilidade de Ibrahim Sayed Ibrahim - que morreu a bordo do navio egípcio Wadi Al Arab no último dia 11 - ter sido infectado por antraz. Araújo não descarta a hipótese de tentativa de ato terrorista. A embarcação, que saiu do Brasil com destino ao Canadá, está retida desde a última sexta-feira no porto de Halifax, depois que o IML (Instituto Médico Legal) de Belém apontou indícios de contaminação pela bactéria, usada em armas biológicas, no corpo de Ibrahim. Ele morreu enquanto o barco estava atracado no Porto de Trombetas, no Pará. Ibrahim, que era o imediato do cargueiro egípcio. "Não descartamos a hipótese de terrorismo, mas é preciso confirmar primeiro se a contaminação foi, de fato, provocada por antraz. Há 90% de chance de ser, mas somente o resultado da contraprova, que deve ser divulgada pelo Instituto Evandro Chagas entre os dias 2 e 3, é que mostrará isso", afirmou Araújo.

"Ele teve hemorragia interna generalizada", disse o superintendente, que está em Tabatinga para receber o ministro da Justiça, Márcio Thomaz Bastos. O ministro irá para a região nesta segunda-feira para conhecer detalhes da operação de fiscalização das fronteiras.

Embarcação isolada

De acordo com o superintendente, a polícia investiga a versão de que Ibrahim recebeu uma encomenda no Cairo, de onde partiu para São Paulo. "Ele veio de avião para o Brasil e se encontrou com a tripulação do navio no Amapá. A bagagem foi lacrada e retida em Belém após sua morte e só será analisada depois que o exame cadavérico ficar pronto."

A embarcação levava um carregamento de bauxita do Pará para uma fábrica da Alcan, no Canadá. Com o resultado do exame do IML, a Polícia Federal acionou autoridades canadenses, que isolaram o navio a cerca de 10 km da costa de Nova Escócia (leste do Canadá), com uma zona de exclusão de 1 km em torno dele. (Agência Folha)


98 posted on 04/28/2003 12:30:02 PM PDT by nicmarlo
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To: Shermy
Several of the reports have Ibrahim boarding the ship at the mouth of the Amazon (note the reference to "Amapa" in your link -- that's the Brazilian state in which the town in question on the delta is located) before the ship went on to Porto Trombetas.
99 posted on 04/28/2003 12:31:13 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: Travis McGee
"The question is, how many more anthrax laden suitcases are on their way?"

Exactly...or already here.

Everyone should remember that this anthrax was destined to kill you and me....do not forget that!

100 posted on 04/28/2003 12:31:36 PM PDT by blam
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