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SWABI: Smallpox epidemic spreading in Swabi
Pakistani Dawn ^ | 8 June 2002 | By Muqaddam Khan

Posted on 06/09/2002 10:31:38 PM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29

SWABI, June 8: The smallpox epidemic is rapidly spreading in these parts of the province, but the district health department has failed to take any step to contain this deadly disease, Dawn learnt here on Saturday.

It has been reported from different parts of the Swabi district that a large number of children have suffered from smallpox, but the authorities concerned have failed to take any action to prevent this disease or immunize the people against it.

Smallpox is a fatal disease which causes high fever, leaves permanent marks on the skin and spreads very fast. Timely treatment and precautionary measures are vital for controlling this malady.

A health official said that the dilemma of the people was that they were not aware of the danger aspects of this ailment as the children suffering from it have neither been kept in isolation nor properly treated. And this resulted in the spread of the virus.

In most of the cases, the children of a family or those living close to each other, contract it at one and the same time.

The residents of Naro Banda, a rural area in the district, told this correspondent that a majority of the children in the village had suffered from smallpox a few years back. "My two brothers, Shams and Akhtar, have been afflicted by smallpox and I have appealed to the officials concerned, but they did not bother either to visit the area or take steps for controlling it," said Mukhtaj Ahmad of Naro Banda.

The mother of a sick child said she had informed the lady health workers about the spread of the disease four days ago, but no action was taken.

It was also noticed that most of the parents of the sick children were uneducated. They had either approached the quack living nearby, or the self-made homeopath doctors to treat the children, but no visible improvement could be seen in the health of the children.

If the district health department delayed taking steps for containing the disease, the epidemic may spread to other areas in the vicinity, or the whole of the district, for that matter.

The suffering people have appealed to the NWFP governor, district government bosses and health officials to send in special teams to extend necessary health cover to the children.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bioterrorism; forum3dnews; smallpoxreport
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I wanted to submit this *primarily* for informative purposes at this time.

It's important to be aware that this report has YET TO BE CONFIRMED OR DISPUTED by the CDC, WHO and any other organization in charge of 'officiating' these reports. However, in the last 2 weeks this is *not* the first published story I have read concerning this 'outbreak' in Naro Banda either. I hope that this is cleared up for us soon, as to whether or not this is a bona fide smallpox outbreak.

1 posted on 06/09/2002 10:31:38 PM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
Somebody needs to get on this fast. Dawn used the word "deadly" and "fatal." Chickenpox isn't either one, usually.
2 posted on 06/09/2002 10:50:40 PM PDT by keri
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
Posted before but the report needs to get out:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/697233/posts

3 posted on 06/09/2002 10:51:21 PM PDT by ex-Texan
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
The residents of Naro Banda, a rural area in the district, told this correspondent that a majority of the children in the village had suffered from smallpox a few years back.

Then why aren't most of them dead?

This is chickenpox, not smallpox.

4 posted on 06/09/2002 10:55:41 PM PDT by Timesink
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
Doubtful, IMO. For instance, how could it get loose in Pakistan?

Perhaps it's monkeypox, which is indigenous to parts of Africa, with symptoms similar to those of smallpox.

5 posted on 06/09/2002 10:59:05 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: ex-Texan
Ah darn-it...My first time posting a story here on FR and I hit a SNAFU!!

Guess I'll remember to CHECK first nest time.
Duh.


A. :)
6 posted on 06/09/2002 11:06:14 PM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
No way. This would be huge news if it were true, and the media would be covering it non-stop.
7 posted on 06/09/2002 11:30:44 PM PDT by Sandy
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To: keri
I thought the article was about SMALLPOX not CHICKENPOX. Two entirely different things.

Nam Vet

8 posted on 06/10/2002 12:43:03 AM PDT by Nam Vet
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
Excerpted from THE DEMON IN THE FREEZER

The US government keeps a list of nations and groups that it suspects either have clandestine stocks of smallpox or seem to be trying to buy or steal the virus. The list is classified, but it is said to include Russia, China, India, Pakistan, Israel, North Korea, Iraq, Iran, Cuba, Serbia, terrorist organization of Osama bin Laden and, possibly, the Aum Shinrikyo sect of Japan.

Ken Alibek, who was once Kanatjan Alibekov, a leading Soviet bioweaponeer and the inventor of the world's most powerful anthrax, defected, in 1992, and revealed how far the Soviet Union had gone with bioweapons. Alibek says that there were twenty tons of liquid smallpox kept on hand at Soviet military bases.

In 1989, a Soviet biologist named Vladimir Pasechnik defected to Britain. British intelligence spent a year debriefing him. By the end, the British agents felt they had confirmed that the U.S.S.R. had biological missiles aimed at the US. This information reached President George Bush and the British PM Margaret Thatcher. Thatcher then apparently confronted the Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev. She was furious, and so was Bush. Gorbachev responded by allowing a small, secret team of American and British bioweapons inspectors to tour Soviet biowarfare facilities. In January of 1991, the inspectors travelled across the U.S.S.R., getting whirlwind looks at some of the major clandestine bases of the Soviet biowarfare program, which was called Biopreparat. The inspectors were frightened by what they discovered. ("I would describe it as scary, and I feel a responsibility to tell the world medical community about what I saw, because doctors could face these diseases," said one inspector, Frank Malinoski, M.D., Ph.D.) On January 14th, the team arrived at Vector, the main virology complex, in Siberia, and the next day, they were shown into a laboratory called Building 6, where one of the inspectors, David Kelly, took a technician aside and asked him what virus they had been working with. The technician said that they had been working with smallpox. Kelly repeated the question three times. Three times, he asked the technician, "You mean you were working with Variola major?" and he emphasized to the technician that his answer was very important. The technician responded emphatically that it was Variola major [the killer strain]. Kelly says that his interpreter was the best Russian interpreter the British government has. "There was no ambiguity," Kelly says. The inspectors were stunned. Vector was not supposed to have any smallpox at all, much less be working with it -- a supreme violation of rules set down by the W.H.O.

Per Malinoski: "There were tons of smallpox virus made in the Soviet Union. The Russians admitted that to us. One of the Vector leaders when he said to us, 'Listen, we didn't account for every ampule of the virus. We had large quantities of it on hand. There were plenty of opportunities for staff members to walk away with an ampule. Although we think we know where our formerly employed scientists are, we can't account for all of them-we don't know where all of them are.' " Today, smallpox and its protocols could be anywhere in the world.

Sitting with D. A. Henderson [widely credited with the eradication of smallpox ] in his house, I mentioned what seemed to be the great and tragic paradox of his life's work. The eradication caused the human species to lose its immunity to smallpox, and that was what made it possible for the Soviets to turn smallpox into a weapon rivalling the hydrogen bomb.

Henderson responded with silence, and then said thoughtfully, "I feel very sad about this. The eradication never would have succeeded without the Russians. Viktor Zhdanov [who first raised the idea] started it, and they did so much. They were extremely proud of what they had done. I felt the virus was in good hands with the Russians. I never would have suspected. They made twenty tons -- twenty tons -- of smallpox. For us to have come so far with the disease, and now to have to deal with this human creation, when there are so many other problems in the world . . ." He was quiet again. "It's a great letdown," he said.

Immune people are like control rods in a nuclear reactor. The American population has little immunity [the vaccination begins wears off after 10 years], so it's a reactor with no control rods. We could have an uncontrolled smallpox chain reaction." This would be something that terrorism experts refer to as a "soft kill" of the United States of America.
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/598296/posts
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/559244/posts
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/553011/posts

9 posted on 06/10/2002 1:14:43 AM PDT by My Identity
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To: Nam Vet, all
Archive Number 20010415.0750 Published Date 15-APR-2001

Note the date as well as the mentioned province on this one--

"Smallpox" Cases Suspected in a Village near Tando Bago (Sindh Province) --------------------------------------------------- TANDO BAGO: The deadly disease smallpox, according to medical science has long been eradicated from the world. The malady afflicting a 20-year old villager and his 4-year old nephew in Qasim Magrio, a village near Tando Bago town, seems to be [similar to] this disease. The disease afflicted them 2 weeks ago, [and they now have festering sores]. They have applied all sorts of ointments to the wounds, as prescribed by doctors, but in vain. They were taken to Taluka Hospital, Tando Bago, but the doctors could not diagnose the mysterious malady. Now the condition of the patients is getting worse. Dr Ali Ahmed Khatri the medical superintendent of Taluka Hospital, Tando Bago, talking to The Star said that although smallpox has long since been eradicated he could not rule out the possibility of its reappearance. --
10 posted on 06/10/2002 1:17:55 AM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: keri
Could be related?

possible related case here,

Dateline 31 March 2002

UMERKOT, March 31 (PNS): Twelve children died in three days due to an outbreak of mysterious disease, resembling measles, in Umerkot and Golarchi. According to details, children in a village near Golarchi chuck no.64 are suffering strange disease, which appears to resemble measles. The mysterious disease has already claimed lives of 12 innocent children while several more are still said to be suffering.
Reffer to link for additional information--
11 posted on 06/10/2002 1:26:05 AM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: My Identity
The first time I ever read that story, I was spooked for days...

In this day and age, nothing would surprise me in the least.
12 posted on 06/10/2002 1:28:50 AM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
ProMed link to above


Duh
13 posted on 06/10/2002 1:33:42 AM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: keri
Ditto!!!
14 posted on 06/10/2002 1:57:57 AM PDT by Bogie
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29; keri
Here are the ProMED links for the earlier incidents people have mentioned. For what it's worth, I do not believe that any of these are smallpox. (Neither the fatality rate nor the transmission rate are what one would expect. And the symptoms are doubtful.) There is some speculation on the cause in the May 30, 2002, link below. Whether the "smallpox" claimed in the article posted in this thread is the same as the disease mentioned in any of the ProMED links is unknown.

15-APR-01 PRO/EDR> Undiagnosed vesicular disease - Pakistan (Sindh): RFI
01-APR-02 PRO/EDR> Unexplained deaths, measles? - Pakistan (Sindh): RFI
21-MAY-02 PRO/EDR> Undiagnosed deaths - Pakistan (Sindh)
25-MAY-02 PRO/EDR> Undiagnosed deaths - Pakistan (Sindh) (02)
30-MAY-02 PRO> Undiagnosed deaths - Pakistan (Sindh) (03)

15 posted on 06/10/2002 2:27:50 AM PDT by Mitchell
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To: keri
Dawn said "deadly" and "fatal" as part of their generic description of smallpox. There's nothing in the article that indicates that anybody has died in this outbreak; if this were actually smallpox, people would have died and I assume the article would have mentioned deaths. So I do not believe that it is smallpox. (Smallpox would also be spreading faster, if my understanding is correct.)

Of course, I do agree with you that somebody should get on this fast. Speculation is insufficient; the disease outbreak must be investigated and the cause determined. It could be simple chickenpox, as several people have surmised, but it could also be monkeypox or camelpox, conceivably associated with a biowarfare program. (And it also might be something completely different, not a smallpox-like disease at all. We really don't know.)

16 posted on 06/10/2002 2:35:17 AM PDT by Mitchell
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To: Mitchell
You do not have to release a disease on "your enemies" to make it spread. Remember that it is easier to drop it on someone closer to home, and let it spread naturally.
17 posted on 06/10/2002 5:49:22 AM PDT by Rick.Donaldson
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To: Mitchell, all
I am in complete agreement with you on this one. Someone needs to get up and publically give official word/diagnosis on what this condition really is or is NOT.
Various individuals I am in touch with have collectively contacted every officiating body we could think of in the last 24 hours, if for no other reason then to get the attention of 'someone' in an attempt to do just that .

According the the latest guidelines, smallpox is classified as a 'hot agent' in Biosafety Level 4 category, which means that a single case, anywhere in the world would be considered a global medical emergency.
If smallpox infection is even *suspected*, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Emergency Response Office should be immediately notified and dispatched.
In the event of an outbreak of even a SINGLE case of smallpox, emergency powers are assumed by local, state, and federal authorities according to a chain of command and division of responsibilities. CDC personnel will rush to the scene with protective gear, vaccine, and whatever equipment is needed to collect samples.

It botheres me that despite repeated claims of smallpox, there SEEMS to be a lack of official action, especially given the times in which we are living. It makes sense then, that any officiating agency would want solid proof either way. I assume that they really don't want anyone going around falsely claiming a smallpox outbreak given the intense measures needed in that case. Claiming repeated, unproven smallpox outbreaks {IMO} would have to be some kind of major liability I'd think, not to mention the financial ramifications, 'hysteria, etc.

Doesn't it make sense given that alone, that proper agencies immediately conclusively confirm or deny the presense of smallpox without hesitation??

That's the problem I have with this whole thing. It's way to quiet out there...especially given the potential severity.
18 posted on 06/10/2002 9:35:47 AM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: Rick.Donaldson
Exactly.

Might make for a more easily controlled experiment of sorts, to expose a remote area for 'testing' purposes.
19 posted on 06/10/2002 9:39:37 AM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
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To: Sweet_Sunflower29
One of the reasons bio-terrorism may not be used is that once un-leashed its spread may not be controlled and that the West would be better to handle it but the third world would get screwed.
20 posted on 06/10/2002 9:40:06 AM PDT by Semper Paratus
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