Ignorance+Islam=Polio

A very sad situation. A devastating side effect of the rampant anti-US rumor mill that exists in the muslim world:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050504/ap_on_re_eu/polio_spreads

Polio Spreads From Nigeria After Claims
LAGOS, Nigeria - Nearly two years after radical Islamic preachers told parents to refuse to have their children vaccinated against polio for fear it was part of a U.S. plot against Muslims, the repercussions are still being felt: A Nigerian strain of the virus that causes the crippling disease has cropped up as far away as Indonesia.
The U.N. health agency says the world still has a chance to meet a deadline to stamp out polio by year’s end, but other experts are pessimistic.

In Kano, northern Nigeria’s largest city, many residents still refuse to have their children vaccinated, not just against polio but against other childhood diseases such as measles.

“They said the vaccines will endanger our daughters. Now they think otherwise. I am yet to be convinced,” said 37-year-old father of four Mustafa Balarabe. He said his children wouldn’t be vaccinated, citing “the general Western plot against Muslims worldwide.”

An imam in Kano, 50-year-old Ibrahim Abubakar, was unapologetic.

“The boycott of the polio vaccine in Kano was necessary to fulfill the religious injunction, which tells us to find out about a thing when we have doubts,” he said.

“I do not agree that we exported polio to any country. If these countries were carrying out vaccinations … they should not have had any cases.”

This week, Indonesia said polio had re-emerged in the country for the first time in a decade and scientists say the strain most probably came from Nigeria.

Fifteen other countries where polio had been eradicated have been re-infected from Nigeria since 2003, when northern Islamic leaders led a vaccine boycott, claiming the immunization campaigns were part of a U.S. plot to infect Muslims with AIDS or render them infertile. American officials have repeatedly said there is nothing to the allegations

Regional governors blocked U.N.-backed vaccination drives for several months, until they were satisfied in May 2004 by the purity of a vaccine, imported, ironically, from Indonesia. The preachers said supplies from a Muslim country could be trusted.

Since immunization restarted in July in Nigeria, polio has been retreating rapidly. Nigeria has seen 54 cases this year, down 40 percent from 94 a year ago, but it still accounts for close to half of cases worldwide.

While some officials with the U.N. World Health Organization say its $4 billion campaign to wipe out polio worldwide by 2005 is still on track, others are skeptical.

“I think there’s a very high risk that we’ll continue to have cases in 2006, especially in Nigeria and a few other African countries,” said Robert Keegan of the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, which is a partner in the anti-polio campaign.

“We are cautiously optimistic that transmission can be stopped in 2006,” he added.

Keegan said Nigeria poses the most serious risk, with its population of around 130 million, many of whom travel widely.

Since 2003, the paralyzing, waterborne illness has spread from Nigeria to Sudan, where it has infected 149 people. Along with 10 other west and central African nations, it has also spread to Ethiopia and Saudi Arabia, but vaccination campaigns have averted major outbreaks in those countries.

The spread of the disease to Yemen last month, however, has been labeled by WHO as “a major epidemic,” with 22 cases confirmed in a country that had previously been considered free of polio.

Bruce Aylward, coordinator of the WHO’s Global Polio Eradication Program, sees many reasons to be optimistic over the fight against polio in Nigeria.

“What’s happening there, to be honest, is close to extraordinary,” he said by telephone during a visit to India, one of six countries in the world where polio is still endemic.

“Here’s a program that had virtually ground to a halt for around 12 months, but the leadership in the north of the country as well as in the south have responded very rapidly.”

The vaccination campaigns that restarted in 2004 “began to have a bite very quickly,” he said, with cases dropping rapidly even during the typical peak polio season running from November to July.

Key to this has been the support of local political, traditional and religious leaders in backing the campaign, particularly in visiting villages ahead of regular vaccination drives to persuade people of the vaccines’ safety.

However, so far this year, an estimated one-fifth of all Nigerian children aged 1 to 5 targeted by the campaign have not been immunized. Although the World Health Organization says only a small proportion of this is due to continued opposition to the vaccine, it declined to give out its data.

Aylward said that while the polio campaign looked like it was on-track in five of the six endemic nations — India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Egypt and Niger — the situation was far more uncertain in the sixth, Yemen.

Two danger countries are Sudan and Ivory Coast, where civil war and unrest have often prevented vaccination campaigns.

Polio spread from Sudan to Ethiopia this year, reappearing in border areas after four years of absence. Aylward said “the risk of explosion is very high” in Ethiopia, where the country’s vast size and mountainous terrain would make a nationwide vaccination campaign difficult.

The other risk, Aylward said, is Congo, the war-beset nation bordering Sudan to the west.

These countries had already been rid of polio under previous immunization campaigns. If polio spread there “we could get into trouble and have a serious delay,” Aylward said.

Re: Ignorance+Islam=Polio


http://www.infochangeindia.org/HealthItop.jsp?section_idv=2

India has 5.3 mn HIV+ people, outstripping S Africa, alleges Global Fund chief

The head of the Global Fund for HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis has raised a storm in official circles in India by claiming that official statistics on the number of HIV+ people in India were “wrong” and that the epidemic was “out of control” in the country

Claims that India now has 5.3 million HIV-positive people, which means that it has overtaken South Africa as the country with the highest number of people living with HIV/AIDS, have been dismissed by the Indian government that still places the number at 5.1 million.

Richard Feachem, executive director of the Global Fund for AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis, an international agency engaged in tackling the AIDS pandemic, said recently that United Nations figures showing that South Africa had more HIV cases than India were inaccurate and that nothing was being done to stop the rapid spread of the virus in India. “The epidemic (in India) is growing very rapidly. It is out of control. There is nothing happening in India today that is big or serious enough to prevent it,” Feachem said.

The government-controlled National AIDS Control Organisation’s (NACO’s) chief S Y Qureshi dismissed Feachem’s statement as “nonsense”. “Our (AIDS) surveillance systems are certified by the World Health Organisation, the UN agency UNAIDS and the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR)…We stand by our figure of 5.1 million (infections).”

Latest figures on the disease released by UNAIDS in July 2004 showed that South Africa had the highest number of people with HIV/AIDS in the world, with an estimated 5.3 million infected adults and children in a range of 4.5-6.2 million. India was second with 5.1 million, but the range estimate was far wider – between 2.5 and 8.5 million – because of inaccurate or incomplete reporting on the disease.

Independent Indian experts have also put the range of cases in India much higher, again because of lack of reliable data in relation to the HIV pandemic in the country. Anjali Gopalan of the Naz Foundation, a non-government organisation working with HIV-infected people, said the official figures did not look reliable. “We have seen the numbers of infected grow rapidly. Each and every confirmed case hides at least two more. This means the number of infected could be as high as 15 million,” she said.

Qureshi also strongly rejected Feachem’s comments in Paris on April 19 that the epidemic in India was spreading rapidly and that nothing was being done to stop it. “India has to wake up and India has to take this very, very seriously,” Feachem said. “Without action, millions and millions and millions of Indians are going to die.”

“HIV/AIDS is a serious problem (in India). We are aware of the gravity of the situation and we have programmes to deal with it,” was Qureshi’s response.

Feachem also warned that the illness would spread faster among India’s majority Hindu population than it would among Muslims, who constitute a little over 14% of the population, because Muslims tend to be circumcised, which, he said, was “an acknowledged protective factor” against the HIV virus.

The Global Health Fund, set up in 2001 by the G8 group of industrialised countries to provide funding for countries worst affected by HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, has committed more than US$ 3 billion to 300 programmes in 127 countries to combat the three diseases. It provides funding for HIV prevention projects, but there are instances where the Fund will grant funding for treatment as well.

Despite NACO refuting Feachem’s assessment, the Indian government is nonetheless concerned and has decided to seek the help of private consultants to determine how many of its billion-plus population are indeed HIV-positive. Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss said his ministry could hire international consulting firm McKinsey, the Indian Institute of Management in the southern city of Bangalore or Tata Consultancy Services. “We are considering private agencies like Tata Consultancy, IIM-Bangalore and McKinsey to carry out this survey. This will be finalised in about two weeks,” he told reporters. “We are very concerned. We want to know the exact figures before this becomes an economic burden.” Source: www.bbcnews.com, April 20, 2005
NDTV, April 20, 2005
www.bbcnews.com, April 19, 2005
AFP, April 19, 2005

[font=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]New food safety bill proposes life term for food adulterationIndia’s proposed new food safety law that will replace multiple laws on food standards seeks stricter action on food adulteration in the country, including longer prison terms and heavier fines

Food adulteration cases that result in death will now be punishable with life imprisonment for those who are responsible, while cases of unsafe food will attract heavy fines under India’s proposed new integrated food safety law. The new law also fixes the responsibility of ensuring food safety on food business operators in a move that the government hopes will make it easier to enforce safety norms.

The proposed Food Safety and Standards Bill of 2005 aims at raising the quality and safety of food products that are either manufactured, produced, supplied or ready-to-serve. This would also ensure that the domestic industry taps the export market. Currently, it is estimated that around 35% of the country’s food products are adulterated.

The new law will give consumers greater rights by setting a year’s imprisonment and a fine of Rs 1 lakh in cases where unsafe food does not result in illness. And, life imprisonment along with a fine of Rs 10 lakh if adulteration causes death.

For sub-standard food that does not conform to prescribed standards but is not unsafe, the manufacturer or distributor will have to pay a fine of up to Rs 5 lakh. Under the new law, penalties for misbranded foods are being proposed at a maximum of Rs 3 lakh, if they do not result in illness.

Earlier, the health ministry had suggested that food that causes death or harm to a person’s body should be considered a criminal offence, and, under Section 320 of the Indian Penal Code, invite a prison term of no less than three years, extendable to life term and a fine of Rs 40,000 or more. Under the proposed new law, the responsibility for ensuring that food that is imported, produced, processed, manufactured or distributed is not adulterated or sub-standard rests with the food business operators. The existing laws are more regulatory; the government has to go after the food industry to ensure that standards on food, safety and public health are adhered to. Source: www.newindprss.com, April 15, 2005

Re: Ignorance+Islam=Polio

http://www.wjla.com/news/stories/0804/169156.html


**India’s Anti-Polio Campaign Resisted **

GAYA, India (AP) - Gearing up for the final push to wipe out polio, India has run into a hurdle in an eastern state, where poor, conservative communities are refusing to give polio drops to children because they distrust the medicine and its distributors.

The resistance could seriously hurt India’s chances of meeting a United Nations deadline for eradicating the potentially crippling disease globally by 2005.

Health workers dispensing polio drops in the slums of Gaya in Bihar have met resistance from slum dwellers who say the drops contain anti-fertility or impotency inducing drugs and are part of the government efforts to curb India’s burgeoning population.

“They feel it will reduce fertility of future generations,” Mahjabeen Anjum, a health worker participating in a special polio vaccination drive, said Friday.

Polio usually strikes children under 5 through contaminated drinking water and attacks the central nervous system, causing paralysis, muscular atrophy, deformation and, in some cases, death.

India has reported 29 new polio cases this year, after 260 last year and 1,556 in 2002. Seven of the cases detected this year were in Bihar.

Sanjeeda Khatoon, a vegetable vendor and mother of nine, told The Associated Press she had not allowed health workers to give the polio preventive drops to her children.

“The government is more concerned with population control than the health of people,” Khatoon said. “Neither I, nor my mother, nor even my mother’s mother was immunized, yet none of us got polio.”

Health workers from UNICEF have recruited counselors to try to counter such concerns, Anjum said.

World Health Organization experts say even a single case of polio can result in a flare-up of the disease and prove a setback to the global aim of wiping out polio by 2005.

The city’s chief medical officer, Ramji Upadhyay, said there are only isolated incidents of resistance.

“By and large the anti-polio campaign has been going on smoothly,” Upadhyay said.

Efforts to eradicate in polio also stalled in Africa when a northern state in Nigeria banned inoculations after religious leaders alleged that foreign powers were spreading AIDS and infertility among Muslims with the vaccine. U.N. officials rejected the charge and said the vaccines were safe.

Nigeria’s Kano state - where a recent epidemic of the crippling disease started and spread to 10 other African nations - allowed vaccinations to resume last month after a nearly yearlong boycott.

Re: Ignorance+Islam=Polio

i think i see the point you're trying to make tariq, if you could only say it in words instead of c&p long articles..

Re: Ignorance+Islam=Polio

Ravage,

Will do so,..as I get any twisted comments from Stu,…don’t worry,..you gonna see full blown response in my own words to him,…