People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
35 August 30, 2009 |
How the Swine Flu Spread
Yohannan Chemarapally
IT
was Fidel Castro in one of his �Reflections� who brought to the
attention of
the world the fact that the Mexican authorities kept the spread of the
H1NI
virus a secret for a critical period of time. The reason the Mexican
authorities did so was to ensure that the visit of the American
president,
Barak Obama to their country in mid April went ahead as scheduled. The
Associated Press had reported that �Obama�s April 16 visit came a week
before
Mexican officials announced that Swine Flu was spreading, prompting an
eventual
mass shutdown that brought many parts of the country to a virtual
halt�. The
news agency in the same report quoted from an article in the reputed
journal
�Science� that suggested that the epidemic could have started �anywhere
between
November 3 to March 2�.
Fidel
in another of his �Reflections� delved on the article in �Science�
magazine that
had concluded that the symptoms of the swine flu were already appearing
in late
March, five weeks before the official announcement about the outbreak
of the epidemic.
�A study published in the journal Science estimated
In
the last week of April, the WHO director general, Margaret Chan,
declared that
the swine flu was a full fledged pandemic. She said that in such a
scenario,
�all of humanity is under a threat�. In July, the WHO said that two
billion of
the world�s population could be affected by H1N1 in the next two years.
According
to the organisation, the swine flu virus has spread to 160 countries in
the
last four months. Many scientific bodies and medical professionals
disagreed
with the WHO�s classification of the H1N1 virus as a �pandemic�. They
also felt
that the world body was over-reacting to the swine flu outbreak.
The
1918 flu had killed 30-50 million people worldwide but at the time the
general
populace had no access to medicines and hygienic conditions world wide
were
abysmal. Two million people died in the 1957 flu epidemic. Between two
to three
million people died in the 1968 outbreak. On an average, 250,000 to
500,000
people die every year during the flu season. In fact, every year, other
diseases
claim more human casualties. The WHO estimates that a million people
die of
malaria and two million from AIDS, every year.
Fidel
wrote the articles after the Mexican president Felipe Calderon
postponed his
scheduled official visit to
Besides,
US &
FOR SPREADING THE VIRUS
The
H1N1 virus first broke out in the community of La Gloria in the state
of Vera
Cruz. The local media dubbed it the �NAFTA flu� because the area is
next to an
American owned pig farm that was relocated to
According
to many experts, the virus spread rapidly because of the free movement
of pigs
and labour in the region, facilitated by the NAFTA agreement between
the
In
the recently concluded �Three Amigos� summit of the three North
American
countries�the
VACCINES TO BE
OUT OF REACH
FOR POOR NATIONS
On
April 11, the Pan-American Health Organisation�s Watch Group asked the
Mexican
health ministry to verify an alleged outbreak of influenza in the
community of
La Gloria, emphasising that it could pose a significant international
health
risk. But the Mexican authorities seem to have given a higher priority
to the
visit of the new American president, his first to a neighbouring
country since
taking over. Mexican officials have admitted to the media that their
government
was left alone to tackle the epidemic despite claims to the contrary by
the
three leaders assembled in
The
There
are growing demands that the three North American countries should form
a
commission to enquire whether the big pig farms owned by
multinationals, like
the one in La Gloria, could in the future incubate even more lethal
viruses. Mexican
officials said that there was no trilateral strategy to confront the
epidemic
despite its �ground zero� discovery in La Gloria. No
independent analysis was done by experts
of the three countries of the pigs and the general hygienic conditions
at the
multinational owned farm.
Local
residents of La Gloria had been complaining for a long time about the
huge
pools of pig excrement and toxic chemical left unattended in their
neighbourhood by the company. More than 30 per cent of the people
living near
the pig plant had come down with flu-like symptoms. The mortality rates
in the
region as a result of the H1N1 infections were initially higher in