Britain’s laboratories have been ordered to strengthen 
security on stocks of more than 100 deadly viruses and bacteria after an MI5 
warning that Islamic terrorists are training in germ warfare. The biological 
agents include polio, rabies, tuberculosis and avian flu. Food poisoning 
bacteria such as E. coli and the sources of a number of rare tropical and 
Middle Eastern illnesses are also included.   Scientists and laboratory staff 
in universities, hospitals and pharmaceutical companies who deal with agents 
will have to be vetted by police, and their laboratories will be checked by 
government safety inspectors. Stock will have to be regularly audited. The 
crackdown comes after MI5 privately warned the Foreign and Commonwealth Office 
that al-Qaeda was actively recruiting scientists. Extremist groups are known to 
have targeted students, offering to fund courses in return for using their 
newly acquired expertise.
                NI_MPU('middle');  Last November Dame Eliza Man-ningham-Buller, 
the Director-General of MI5, gave warning that terror attacks in Britain could 
involve weapons of mass destruction.
  She said that terrorists were seeking the means to mount a range of attacks 
using chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear devices. “We know that the 
aspiration is there, we know attempts to gather materials are there, we know 
that attempts to gather technologies are there,” she said.
  Ayman al-Zawahri, al-Qaeda’s second-in-command, warned the the West in an 
internet video last night of a reprisal “far worse than anything it has seen” 
if Washington did not change its policies towards Muslim states.
  After the 9/11 terrorist attacks in America, security at laboratories was 
stepped up amid new intelligence on the ambitions of al-Qaeda and its allies, 
and restrictions were placed on 47 agents under the Antiterrorism, Crime and 
Security Act 2001. Yesterday the Government announced that the list was being 
increased to 103, including 45 viruses, 21 bacteria, 2 fungi, 13 toxins and 18 
animal pathogens.
  Tony McNulty, the Home Office minister in charge of policing, said: “The 
terror threat is always changing and we must adapt to ensure it is combated 
effectively. As terrorists look for new ways to endanger life, we have to take 
action to be one step ahead.”
  He said: “That is why we are extending the list of controlled substances to 
prevent terrorist groups using chemical or biological materials as terrorist 
weapons.”
  The move comes after a review by a Whitehall committee known as the Salisbury 
Group, which includes MI5, police, scientists from Porton Down, Defra, the 
Health and Safety Executive and the Health Protection Agency.
  The additions to the list include many of the bacteria and viruses that 
strike at animals, such as foot-and-mouth disease. These might not be harmful 
to humans but could be devastating to the economy, as was the foot-and-mouth 
outbreak in Britain in 2001.
  Others such as Rift Valley fever normally infect animals but have spread to 
human populations and caused widespread illness and death as the illness did in 
Egypt in the 1970s.
  Guanarito virus or Venezuelan haemorrhagic fever can be fatal in a third of 
cases, while Shigella boydii can cause dysentery.
  John Wood, of the National Institute for Biological Standards and Controls, 
said scientists will have to show a valid reason for working with the agents. 
He said the changes mirrored controls in the US and would probably mean much 
stricter access to laboratories.
  Alistair Hay, Professor of Environmental Toxicology at Leeds University, said 
that the measures were prudent. He said the introduction of the first controls 
had been accepted by the scientific community.
  He said that in the 1980s a cult in Orgeon used a bacterium to spread food 
poisoning and sabotage elections that threatened them.

    
 
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