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4 Apr 2005 12:59:06 -0000

 

STOP SMALLPOX GENETIC ENGINEERING!

press-release

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

========================================================

 

 

URGENT ALERT! TAKE ACTION NOW!

 

 

STOP SMALLPOX GENETIC ENGINEERING!

 

4 April 2005

 

Please take action now to stop smallpox genetic engineering!

 

Visit www.smallpoxbiosafety.org to send a letter to the WHO General, urging the World Health Assembly to reject

a proposal that would permit the genetic engineering of

smallpox, and to instead ensure that all remaining stocks of

the virus are destroyed within two years.

 

The proposal to genetically engineer smallpox, which would

also permit smallpox genes to be inserted into related

poxviruses and the unlimited distribution of small segments

of smallpox DNA, poses a large number of public health,

biosafety, and biological weapons risks.

 

The World Health Assembly will discuss the proposal when it

meets in Geneva, Switzerland from 16-25 May 2005.

 

Every letter counts, so please send one today. This is very

easily done by going to www.smallpoxbiosafety.org, selecting

your language of preference, entering the required details,

and clicking on the `submit' button.

 

Please also contact your government's representatives to the

WHA. The website provides links to national health

ministries. The website is available in Chinese, English,

French, German, Italian, and Spanish.

 

Attached are the press release and some background

information.

 

With best wishes, Third World Network 121-S Jalan Utama

10450 Penang Malaysia Email: twnet

 

 

 

Third World Network

The Sunshine Project

 

International Campaign to Stop Smallpox Genetic Engineering

Announced

 

Non-Governmental Organizations Urge the World Health

Organization to Put Smallpox in the History Books Instead of

the Genetic Engineering Lab

 

(4 April 2005) – An international alliance of non-

governmental organizations has launched a campaign to urge

the World Health Organization to reject a proposal that

would permit the genetic engineering of smallpox and to

instead ensure that all remaining stocks of the virus are

destroyed within two years. Debate on the proposal will take

place at the World Health Assembly (WHA), which meets in

Geneva, Switzerland beginning on May 16th.

 

The NGOs, led by Third World Network and The Sunshine

Project, have opened a website, www.smallpoxbiosafety.org,

where organizations and individuals can send letters to the

WHO Director General. The website provides links to health

ministries, so that people can also contact their

government's representatives to the WHA. The website is

available in Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, and

Spanish.

 

The proposal to genetically engineer smallpox, which would

also permit smallpox genes to be inserted into related

poxviruses and the unlimited distribution of small segments

of smallpox DNA, poses a large number of public health,

biosafety, and biological weapons risks. It was prompted by

the United States, and has been recommended to the WHA

through an imbalanced advisory committee. A Briefing Paper

(The Genetic Engineering of Smallpox: WHO's Retreat from the

 

Eradication of Smallpox Virus and Why it Should be Stopped)

at the website explains the political process that led to

the proposal, the risks, and why it should be rejected. An

edited excerpt from the paper that provides more background

is appended to this news release.

 

Between now and the May opening of the WHA, the NGOs will be

seeking to mobilize a wide variety of non-governmental

organization and citizens. They will contact all member

governments of WHO and urge them to reject the committee's

recommendations and to instead:

 

* Prohibit the genetic engineering of smallpox, the

insertion of smallpox genes in other poxviruses, and any

further distribution of smallpox genetic material for non-

diagnostic purposes;

 

* Set a firm and irrevocable date, within two years, for the

destruction of all remaining stocks of smallpox virus

(including viral chimeras, or hybrids with other

poxviruses);

 

* In the interim before destruction, ensure that the WHO

Advisory Committee on Variola Virus Research and its

advisors are regionally balanced and that the

 

Committee and its subsidiary groups conduct their oversight

activities in a fully transparent and accountable manner.

Interested organizations and people are urged to visit

www.smallpoxbiosafety.org to learn more about this issue and

to send a letter to the WHO Director General. Contacts:

 

Third World Network

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Tel: + 603-2300 2585

E-mail: twnkl

GMT + 7

 

The Sunshine Project

Austin, Texas, US

Tel: +1 512 494 0545

E-mail: tsp

GMT -6

 

Background

 

The World Health Organization (WHO) is justly proud of the

global effort that brought about the eradication of smallpox

in 1977; but the truth of the matter is that the job was

never finished. The United States and Russia still retain

stocks of the smallpox virus (Variola major), an easily

transmitted disease and ancient scourge of humanity that is

a potent biological weapons agent. Smallpox kills one

quarter or more of the people it infects and leaves many

that do not die disfigured and blind.

 

In 1999, the remaining stocks of smallpox virus were slated

for imminent destruction. But Russia and the US balked at

the World Health Assembly (WHA) resolution calling upon them

to destroy the virus. Instead, the US has accelerated

smallpox research. Now, it wants to open the Pandora's Box

of genetically-engineered smallpox. A plan to genetically

engineer the virus could be approved by the World Health

Assembly in May 2005. The plan also includes the expression

of smallpox genes in related poxviruses, and unlimited

distribution of segments of smallpox DNA. If implemented,

this plan would pose serious biosafety risks and open the

road to an artificial reconstruction of the virus for

biowarfare purposes.

 

Fewer and fewer people, and their leaders, have personal

memories of the horror of smallpox, or even the scars left

by vaccination, which had ended in most countries by the

late 1970s. As if the world is condemned to repeat history

through forgetfulness, WHO has now lost the political will

that it once had to finish the job of smallpox eradication.

Much of the blame can be laid at the feet of WHO's decision

to leave oversight of smallpox research in the hands of an

unbalanced and highly politicized " technical " advisory

committee that is dominated by a small number of countries

and scientists with a personal interest in pursuing smallpox

research. It was US pressure that rammed the proposal for

genetically-engineered smallpox through that committee, and

now the World Health Assembly is in an inglorious position

of being on the verge of endorsing what may prove to be the

undoing of one its own greatest achievements.

 

Civil society and like-minded governments must urgently come

together to turn the tide. The creation of genetically-

engineered smallpox and hybrids of smallpox and other

viruses (called chimera) pose serious public health,

biosafety, and biological weapons dangers to the entire

world. With increased smallpox experimentation, the world

stands closer to the accident or deliberate act that would

cause a release of the virus.

 

Because many poxviruses are closely-related to each other

and, in their natural state frequently not entirely species-

specific, the insertion of smallpox genes in related viruses

has the potential to create dangerous new human (and animal)

pathogens. Through genetic engineering or targeted

mutations, labs that receive pieces of the smallpox genome

may develop the ability to create smallpox or a novel virus

with its characteristics without ever receiving an actual

sample of Variola major. Moreover, laboratory safety

practices and technology cannot erase human error and

equipment failures that lead to accidents, as evidenced by a

recent string of lab-acquired infections and environmental

releases of SARS, Ebola, tularemia, and other dangerous

diseases. In fact, the last reported human cases of smallpox

were laboratory-acquired (see page 3 of the Briefing Paper -

The Genetic Engineering of Smallpox: WHO's Retreat from the

Eradication of Smallpox Virus and Why it Should be Stopped).

 

Contained to only two labs in Russia and the US, smallpox

has a unique multilateral research oversight structure that

has no parallel with any other disease. Because of the

unique situation of smallpox research, if WHO approves these

experiments it will not only increase the threat posed by

smallpox itself. WHO will also broadcast the signal that it

is internationally acceptable to have genetic engineering of

other germs, including experiments in which new and more

dangerous forms may result – or even be intended.

 

If endorsed by the WHA, the intergovernmental encouragement

of the creation of designer disease will come at a

particularly dangerous time. Globally, the number of high

containment facilities handling dangerous disease agents is

expanding and the hazardous applications of biotechnology

increasing. This is reflected in a growing number of lab

accidents in a variety of countries in recent years

involving highly pathogenic agents in high containment

facilities. Particularly in the US, the scope and quantity

of research on biological weapons agents is growing, and now

exceeds the cost of the effort that created the atomic bomb

(the Manhattan Project), adjusted for inflation.

 

Individuals and civil society organizations should take

action and voice their opposition to WHO and their national

public health authorities, urging them to reject the

recommendations of the committee and to instead ensure

prompt destruction of all remaining virus stocks. This

briefing provides a political overview of smallpox

eradication, the WHO processes that led to the present state

of affairs, and related issues of biosafety and prohibitions

on biological weapons.

 

 

========================================================

 

 

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dedicated to providing critical public information on

cutting edge science, and to promoting social accountability

and ecological sustainability in science.

 

 

========================================================

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General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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