
At least
six universities and the New York State Department of Health are competing
for contracts to build one or two labs, where scientists can infect
research monkeys and other animals with such lethal agents as the Ebola,
Marburg and Lassa viruses. Those African hemorrhagic diseases are often
fatal and always painful, marked by severe bleeding.

Government officials insist that the labs will be secure and serve only
defensive purposes. But the U.S. military has a history of dabbling
in biological agent programs that push up against a 30-year-old international
treaty banning them.
They'll also likely create new classes of toxins - including genetically
engineered ones - as part of the process of constructing weapons they
want to defeat
. Developing antidotes or vaccines for those toxins might take years.
"It's perversely increasing the risk of exposure," said Richard
Ebright, a Rutgers University chemistry professor and bioweapons expert
who believes one additional lab is all that is needed.
Ebright and others believe labs managed by universities could prove
less secure than government facilities, which have had their own security
lapses. Many believe the anthrax attacks that killed five people and
briefly paralyzed Capitol Hill in 2001 were launched by a scientist
with access to one of the government's high-security facilities - called
Biosafety Level 4 labs, or BSL-4 for short.
Protests Federal investigators
searched a former apartment of one such microbiologist, Steven Hatfill,
but never stated publicly that he was a suspect. Hatfill has denied
involvement.
In his state of the union speech in January, President Bush called for
nearly $6 billion to make vaccines and treatments against potential
bioterror pathogens. The National Institutes of Health bioterrorism
budget, meanwhile, has increased 500 percent this year to $1.3 billion
- a large part of which will be used to build at least three labs.
Government officials and leaders of universities vying for the bioterrorism
largesse are unapologetic.
NIH officials
say that only two of the five U.S. facilities equipped do such work are
effectively in use today, and they're overburdened. One is at the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta - the only place
in the United States that handles live smallpox.
The other full-scale lab is the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of
Infectious Diseases at Maryland's Fort Detrick. The government is already
going ahead with additional labs at Fort Detrick and in Hamilton, Mont.
"What we have is not adequate to meet the current biodefense efforts,"
said Rona Hirschberg of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Disease.
Officials said they don't know how many scientists work in the biosafety
labs, but that the number is tiny and many more trained researchers are
needed. One of the byproducts of such endeavors will be the study
of emerging diseases like the West Nile virus, which has infected 4,000
people and killed 274.
"The emerging diseases that we have to deal with are intense,"
said Virginia Hinshaw, provost of the University of California-Davis,
which hopes to build one of the new labs. "The public health need
is very large." But mistrust runs deep, especially in the California
college town of Davis. Lobbied intensely by vocal residents, the city
council voted to oppose the school's application to build a lab.
The Davis protests reached a crescendo in February with the escape of
a lab monkey, which is still missing. Davis officials said it was disease-free
and probably now dead. Still, the school's $200 million bid for a BSL-4
lab has been jeopardized.
Government officials insist that the labs will be secure and serve only
defensive purposes. But the U.S. military has a history of dabbling in
biological agent programs that push up against a 30-year-old international
treaty banning them. Most recently, it was revealed that researchers
at the Dugway Proving Ground in Utah have been developing anthrax for
use in testing biological defense systems.
FROM: Jean Hudon
Earth Rainbow Network Coordinator
http://www.EarthRainbowNetwork.com
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