..............................................................

>From the New Paradigms Project [Not Necessarily Endorsed]:

From: "Alex Constantine" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Lloyd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Kris" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Edward Hooper on AIDS Origins
Date: Saturday, July 15, 2000 2:36 PM

Observer
[� Edward Hooper 2000. The revised paperback edition of Edward Hooper's 'The
River - A Journey Back to the Source of HIV and Aids' is published by Allen
Lane/Penguin at �10.99. ]


How Aids was unleashed upon Africa

World scientists gather in Durban today to discuss the epidemic sweeping the
continent. But still we don't know how it began. Edward Hooper returns to
Uganda where 14 years ago he first charted the scale of the calamity. His
fears have been confirmed, he argues: we unwittingly sparked the horror with
a contaminated polio vaccine

Sunday July 9, 2000

The catch of fish was good this morning, and because the coffee season is
beginning, swollen sacks of beans lie scattered in the dirt like great brown
maggots. A few yards away, beside the boats drawn up along the shores of
Lake Victoria, the marabou storks skip and glide from one fish head to
another.
Kasensero looks as dirty and dissolute as it ever did, as the sun burns down
on its tumbledown shacks of wood and corrugated iron. Now is the season for
making money and the village is full of young fishermen and smugglers, and
young women with dyed hair. There is a constant hubbub of shouting and
laughter, flirting and argument, intertwined with the lingala music that
booms from the tiny bars and cafes. Although it is not yet noon, many are
already drunk.
One mile away, in the relative calm of the landing site at the mouth of the
Kagera river, the man in charge tells us that Kasensero never changes - that
the young still make money, have sex, and forget to use condoms.
This, for me, is a journey back in time. For this small smuggling village is
the place that I and a fellow-journalist first visited in 1986, after tales
of the cataclysm along Uganda's southern border began filtering up to
Kampala.
The people told us, almost casually, how 'Slim disease' had arrived in their
midst four or five years earlier, and how more than 100 of Kasensero's
itinerant population of 500 had died since then. Then they called a meeting
beneath the big tree, and asked us what to do about it. Acutely aware of our
amateur status, we did our best. Use condoms, we said. If you have an
injection, make sure the needle is first boiled. By good fortune, the advice
was sound, and nowadays it is echoed by posters on display in the village -
posters that are all too often ignored. The only thing that has changed in
14 years is the name. These days, everyone calls it Aids.
Happily, the stubborn, hedonistic fatalism of Kasensero is not typical of
Uganda as a whole, where the norm nowadays is to 'love carefully', to use
condoms. Elsewhere in Africa, however, there are still many such venues, and
wherever they exist, they fuel infection rates in surrounding areas. So it
is that over two-thirds of the estimated 53 million people who have become
infected with human immunodeficiency virus type one (HIV-1) since the start
of the pandemic have been from Africa.
Back in 1986, we spent four days travelling around Kasensero and its
neighbouring villages, until we realised that we were witnessing something
momentous and strange. Aids had been seen before in specific groups such as
gays, drug users and haemophiliacs, and in hospital beds across central
Africa, but what we were witnessing was the first community-wide Aids
epidemic in the world. Men, women and children were all affected, and we
rushed back to Europe and America to tell the story.
In 1995 my friend, the late great evolutionary biologist Bill Hamilton,
visited to get an update on the situation and brought back sad news about
the men who had escorted us through the villages in 1986 - the tall,
dignified district chairman, Joseph Ssebyoto-Lutaya, and the ever-smiling
medical assistant, Jimmy Ssemambo. Both had died of Aids.
Now, 14 years after that initial visit, I call at Joseph's house, in the
village of Kyebe, near Kasensero, to offer my respects. His wife, it turns
out, died a few months after him, but their 10 children all survive, and
thankfully all look healthy. The younger ones are still cared for by their
grandparents, who live in the house next door to Joseph's, beside the
concrete graves among the banana trees. These children are lucky. So many
houses around here now lie deserted, abandoned - their former occupants
either dead, or scattered to the winds.
I am here in Uganda with a Channel 4 news team, to help them prepare a
front-line report ahead of the thirteenth International Conference on Aids,
which opens in Durban today. There has been a belated acceleration of
interest in Aids and Africa over the past few months. Partly this has been
because of the conference, but partly because of other events including the
ill-judged comments of South Africa's president, Thabo Mbeki, questioning
whether HIV actually causes Aids, which have provided unmerited oxygen for
the moribund hypothesis of Professor Peter Duesberg. And at long last,
international donors such as the US and Britain have made significant
contributions.
In addition, my book The River seems to have ignited a major scientific
debate about how Aids started in Africa. This pleases me, for the book was
an obsession and a labour of love. It took more than nine years to research
and write and included more than 600 interviews with scientists. What I was
stunned to discover was that a perfectly sound and scientific explanation
for the origin of Aids had been casually - and irresponsibly - dismissed by
the scientific establishment. Now, as a result of the controversy, a two-day
conference on 'The Origins of HIV and Aids' will be held at the Royal
Society in London in September.
My central hypothesis was that the Aids pandemic was sparked by an
experimental oral polio vaccine (OPV) called CHAT, which was fed to more
than a million infants, children and adults in the former Belgian colonies
of central Africa between 1957 and 1960. It is now accepted that the
immediate ancestor of HIV-1 is the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) of
the common chimpanzee. In the late Fifties, polio vaccines were grown in
cells from monkey kidneys, but evidence suggests that some batches of the
CHAT vaccine fed in Africa were, uniquely, produced in chimp cells.
By contrast, the hypothesis to which most Aids researchers still subscribe
is that the virus was originally acquired by a hunter or market-woman,
perhaps with cut hands, who butchered a chimp for bushmeat. When asked 'Why
now?' (for chimps have been hunted and eaten since time immemorial), the
reply of 'cut hunter' proponents is that it was probably decolonisation,
leading to urbanisation and new sexual interactions, that allowed the newly
acquired chimp virus to break free from its rural hearth, to proliferate in
an urban environment, and then to spread across Africa.
On the face of it, the cut-hunter theory seems plausible. On the other hand,
the CHAT hypothesis fits the known facts considerably better. For example,
it is now known that the CHAT researchers had a chimpanzee camp at Lindi,
just outside Stanleyville (now Kisangani) in the then Belgian Congo, and
that between 1956 and 1958, some 400 chimpanzees were held there, of which
nearly 300 were first used to test the polio vaccine, and then sacrificed.
According to a growing number of witnesses, both kidneys and blood were
extracted shortly before sacrifice, and were then dispatched in flasks to
Philadelphia and to Belgium, the two places where the CHAT vaccine used in
Africa was made.
Then there are the astounding correlations between CHAT vaccination sites
and early Aids. Fully 64 per cent of the first Aids cases seen in Africa (up
to and including 1980) come from the same towns and villages (all in the
former Belgian colonies of Congo, Rwanda and Burundi) where CHAT was fed in
the Fifties. Furthermore, every single one of the 46 earliest HIV-positive
blood samples from Africa comes from within 140 miles of a CHAT vaccination
site.
Reviews of The River have generally acknowledged that the CHAT theory is
plausible, albeit unproven. However, earlier this year, researchers led by
Bette Korber placed the last common ancestor of all the HIV-1 variants seen
today (which she called 'the Eve virus') in 1931, plus or minus 10 to 20
years. Since this was before the CHAT trials began, Korber pronounced the
polio vaccine theory 'highly unlikely'.
Many US journalists assumed that this theoretical data settled the issue,
which it most certainly did not. Korber's mentor and former boss, Gerry
Myers, will oppose her position at the Royal Society conference pointing out
that Korber's dating says nothing about when chimpanzee SIVs transferred to
humans and that the new data supports the CHAT theory better than the
cut-hunter position.
This and other counter-arguments to CHAT will all be addressed at the London
meeting. It is worth noting, however, that none of the opposing scientists
has thus far come up with data or arguments to refute the theory.
The conference was initially proposed by Hamilton, who was a leading
scientific supporter of the CHAT theory for many years. In January, he
travelled to Kisangani (by then in the midst of civil war) to collect shit
samples from chimpanzees to see whether any were SIV-infected. Tragically,
he contracted malaria and, shortly after his return to England, died.
Since then, there has been a concerted attempt by some of those who made the
vaccine, or who support the cut-hunter theory, to scupper the conference.
First, several 'cut-hunters' who had previously agreed to speak, withdrew.
They later relented, but only after the meeting was postponed from May to
September, and they had been allotted extra speakers.
Meanwhile, a series of extraordinary public and private attacks have been
mounted against Hamilton, myself and others who believe that the CHAT theory
deserves a fair hearing, accusing all involved with organising the London
meeting of being enemies of science.
In fact, there are sound reasons for having the debate that so many wish to
stifle. One is that knowledge of how a disease began often leads to a better
understanding of how to cure, prevent or alleviate it. Another is that the
CHAT story has important implications for future medical and scientific
practice, at a time when we may be about to embark on other well-meaning,
and potentially even more dangerous, biomedical interventions. These include
xenotransplantation (placing animal organs in humans, together with
whichever undiscovered viruses may be lurking within), and trials of live
Aids vaccines (which have the potential to recombine with existing HIV
variants, to devastating effect).
In June 1981, a German missionary doctor, Margerete Bundschuh, saw five
women from the Ugandan border regions with unusual bacterial infections of
the groin and anus, together with a man whose penis was 'half rotted off'.
Much later, she wrote to me to explain her sense that these conditions were
complicated by serious immune-deficiency: 'We had the impressions - sex
infection, three to six months of slow deterioration, then acute disease and
death. At that time, there was no long stage of undetectable Aids.'
Bundschuh worked at Mugana hospital, in northern Tanzania, on the smugglers'
road leading to Lake Victoria and Kasensero, which would witness its first
cases a few months later.
In Tanzania, the new condition was christened 'Juliana' by local people; in
Uganda, 'Slim'. This detail alone - that non-specialists realised a new
disease had arrived - destroys the claims by Peter Duesberg that the Aids
epidemic in Africa is merely a collection of ancient diseases, to which
Western doctors have ascribed a new name.
So how did HIV-1 arrive along the Uganda/Tanzania borders? This
coffee-growing region receives many Hutu migrant workers from Burundi and
Rwanda, so it is possible that one of these was the carrier. However, there
is an alternative explanation.
In the early Sixties, hundreds of thousands of Tutsi refugees fled ethnic
violence in Rwanda. In 1962, 3,000 of them were transferred to this region,
and encouraged to settle. They came from Butare and Nyanza, two of the four
'territories' where CHAT vaccine was administered in Rwanda. Shortly
afterwards, a two-year-old child from one of the settlement villages died of
aggressive Kaposi's sarcoma - a possible early case of Aids.
This same region later experienced a series of upheavals. In 1978, Idi
Amin's army invaded the Kagera salient of northern Tanzania, and Julius
Nyerere summoned 45,000 troops to oppose him. For three months they trained
intensively for the counter-invasion.
Seven thousand men from the 207th brigade camped out on an open, grassy
plain beside the village of Bugandika. Local men told us that there were
many instances of rape, and that: 'Soldiers came and went from village
houses. There were many divorces. Girls and mothers came here from far away
for meat and beer.' Bugandika lies just nine miles from Mugana hospital, at
the foot of the smugglers' road.
It seems likely that someone who spent time at that camp, a soldier or a
female visitor, was already infected with HIV and that - just as with the
gay bath-houses in America at around the same time - a seed was planted in a
fertile environment. From Bugandika, the 207th took a route north which was
different to those of other Tanzanian brigades. It crossed into Uganda at
Joseph Ssebyoto-Lutaya's village, Kyebe, and then moved north through
Kyotera and Masaka to Kampala, which it occupied until the Tanzanian
withdrawal in 1981. By 1987, a quarter of the women in Masaka and Kampala
were HIV-positive, while Kyebe and Kyotera were famous as epicentres of
Aids.
In 1987 Uganda initiated the first Aids Control Programme in Africa, and
began a campaign of health education that continues to this day, with
posters, TV ads, lessons in schools and villages, and the popular radio show
Straight Talk. The rewards are there to be seen. A few days ago, President
Yoweri Museveni announced that national (adult) HIV-prevalence had fallen
from 30 per cent in 1992 to under 10 per cent today.
Last weekend, Bill Hamilton's memorial service took place at New College,
Oxford. I booked an early flight home from Uganda, and made it with minutes
to spare. Bill's family, friends and a large contingent of the great and the
good were there. Mike Worobey, one of his two young Canadian companions on
the fateful Congo expedition, spoke movingly of his 'last bite', delivered
by one of several safari ants. Richard Dawkins, who organised the service,
quoted liberally from the many obituaries, before adding John Maynard
Smith's magnanimous conclusion that Hamilton was 'the only bloody genius we
had'.
It was remarkable to see so many eminent professors with tears in their
eyes. This was a tribute not just to the brilliance of the man, but to his
humanity. Dawkins spoke also of Hamilton's championing of the 'unfashionable
- even reviled' polio vaccine theory. He added later that 'Bill was usually
right'.
Whatever the truth of how Aids began, Africans, tragically, are taking the
brunt. Of the 19 million who have died globally, probably 15 million have
been African. Half of all 15-year-olds in Zimbabwe, Botswana and South
Africa can expect to die of Aids. This is an unprecedented cataclysm - and
it needs an unprecedented response.
This morning, as the Durban Aids conference opens, this is what African
doctors and scientists are saying Africa needs - and needs urgently:
* more needles, syringes, gloves, gowns and protective gear, so that the
virus is not transmitted unnecessarily to health personnel, or to other
patients.
* more drugs, to alleviate the symptoms of Aids.
* more antiseptic solutions and IV drips; more linen, bedding and beds.
* more HIV test kits.
* more money for the training and support of doctors, nurses and
counsellors.
* more condoms.
* more and better focused health education, especially for the young. Repeat
twice over.
These are the simple things that work, that save lives. In comparison,
anti-retroviral treatments can be afforded by very few, and most African
countries lack health systems that can deliver and monitor the drugs.
In addition, more support is needed for social interventions which might
massively reduce onward transmission. Some of these could be quite painful,
but could be effected, given the political will. Let the Catholic Church
match its compassion with pragmatism, and tell its congregations that
condoms may be used to protect lives. Let Africa's politicians and ethnic
leaders tell their peoples that male circumcision can reduce the risk of
contracting HIV during sex. And let a concerted effort be made to elevate
the position of women in African society.
If the oral polio vaccine theory should come to be proved, it is my belief
that an overwhelmingly dreadful and difficult lesson will eventually be
learnt. Vaccines save millions of lives. But new vaccines - including Aids
vaccines - need to be tested appropriately and rigorously before they are
released. New medical and genetic interventions likewise must be tested to
exhaustion, even if that means more money is spent, and even if the
potential benefits are delayed.
But, if CHAT/Aids were proved correct, I believe it would help nobody for
the original researchers, or even the institutions or governments that
supported them, to be deemed legally culpable. At its core, the CHAT vaccine
story involved an attempt to help people, not to kill them. In science, as
in other walks of life, the road to hell is paved with good intentions. In
this case, it was also paved with paternalism and a tendency to exploit
groups that did not control their own destinies. Like other polio vaccines,
CHAT was tested first on the handicapped, then on prisoners. Finally, one
million Africans were 'volunteered' for vaccination by their colonial
masters.
Nowadays, this process is being presented by some of the vaccine-makers as a
heroic attempt to curb polio epidemics in Africa. This is largely incorrect.
In the Fifties, polio was a Western scourge - 95 per cent of Africans were
naturally immune to the virus by the age of five. Essentially, the great
majority of African CHAT vaccinees were used as guinea-pigs to safety-test a
Western vaccine.
In Kampala, Uganda, the first Aids vaccine trials are now taking place on 40
volunteers. Virologists say that to be effective, an Aids vaccine needs to
be tested in an area of high HIV-prevalence, and that Africa affords a more
logical setting for trials than the US or Europe. The trials have received
full approval and co-operation from the Ugandan government.
And yet the vaccine has been prepared against HIV-1 subtype B, the so-called
Euro-American strain, and one which is hardly, if at all, found in Africa.
Ugandan researchers say they want to see if a vaccine against one subtype
can protect against others, and add that the vaccine-makers have promised a
vaccine against subtypes A and D (which are prevalent in Uganda) within two
or three years. However, there is already evidence from chimpanzee trials
which suggests a vaccine prepared against one subtype does not protect
against others. So are the mistakes of the past happening again?
If Aids was a Western medical error, then there surely has to be a change in
Western approaches to helping Africa and Asia cope with their spiralling
epidemics. At the very least, this would involve Western governments
(especially those of the US and Belgium) accepting responsibility for the
devastation caused by past paternalism, past mistakes.
Earlier this year, the US committed $254m to fighting Aids overseas, and
declared the global situation 'a threat to national security'. There was no
mention of the threat to African security and, though welcome, the donation
smacked of pre-emptive action ahead of Durban. The World Bank reckons Africa
needs more like $2 billion; others place it higher.
Law suits and reparations are not the way forward. What might help Africa,
however, is a different scale of financial commitment, a different set of
ethical standards. Cancelling Third World debt might be a start. And drug
companies would earn enormous approval ratings were they to abandon the
profit motive for a moment, and slash prices for Third World drugs and
medical supplies
Massive human support is needed too. Perhaps the setting up of a new agency,
a revamped VSO and Peace Corps for the new millennium, run by Europeans,
Americans, Africans and Asians which would allow caring, ethical,
well-balanced and brave young people to channel those gap years to better
purpose.
The Hamilton Project? Perhaps in years to come, we will routinely watch our
recent graduates, our unemployed but not yet feckless youth, going off to
'do a Bill'.
� Edward Hooper 2000.
The revised paperback edition of Edward Hooper's 'The River - A Journey Back
to the Source of HIV and Aids' is published by Allen Lane/Penguin at �10.99.




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