U.S.
is Responsible for the Ebola Outbreak in West Africa: Liberian
Scientist
By
Timothy Alexander Guzman
17
October, 2014
A
History of Guatemala’s Syphilis Experiment: How a U.S. Led Team
Performed Human Experimentations in Central America
Dr.
Cyril Broderick, A Liberian scientist and a former professor of Plant
Pathology at the University of Liberia’s College of Agriculture and
Forestry says the West, particularly the U.S. is responsible for the
Ebola outbreak in West Africa. Dr. Broderick claims the following in
an exclusive article published in the Daily Observer based in
Monrovia, Liberia. He wrote the following:
The
US Department of Defense (DoD) is funding Ebola trials on humans,
trials which started just weeks before the Ebola outbreak in Guinea
and Sierra Leone. The reports continue and state that the DoD gave a
contract worth $140 million dollars to Tekmira, a Canadian
pharmaceutical company, to conduct Ebola research. This research work
involved injecting and infusing healthy humans with the deadly Ebola
virus. Hence, the DoD is listed as a collaborator in a “First in
Human” Ebola clinical trial (NCT02041715, which started in January
2014 shortly before an Ebola epidemic was declared in West Africa in
March.
Is
it possible that the United States Department of Defense (DOD) and
other Western countries are directly responsible for infecting
Africans with the Ebola virus? Dr. Broderick claims that the U.S.
government has a research laboratory located in a town called Kenema
in Sierra Leone that studies what he calls “viral
fever bioterrorism”, It
is also the town where he acknowledges that is the “epicentre
of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.” Is
it a fact? Is Dr. Broderick a conspiracy theorist? He says
that “there is urgent need for affirmative action in
protecting the less affluent of poorer countries, especially African
citizens, whose countries are not as scientifically and industrially
endowed as the United States and most Western countries, sources of
most viral or bacterial GMOs that are strategically designed as
biological weapons.” He
also asks an important question when he says “It is
most disturbing that the U. S. Government has been operating a viral
hemorrhagic fever bioterrorism research laboratory in Sierra Leone.
Are there others?”
Well,
Mr. Broderick’s claims seem to be true. After all, the U.S.
government has been experimenting with deadly diseases on human
beings for a long time, history tells us so. One example is
Guatemala. Between 1946 and 1948, the United States government under
President Harry S. Truman in collaboration with Guatemalan President
Juan José Arévalo and his health officials deliberately infected
more than 1500 soldiers, prostitutes, prisoners and even mental
patients with syphilis and other sexually transmitted diseases such
as gonorrhea and chancroid (a bacterial sexual infection) out of more
than 5500 Guatemalan people who participated in the experiments. The
worst part of it is that none of the test subjects infected with the
diseases ever gave informed consent. The Boston Globe published the
discovery made by Medical historian and professor at Wellesley
College, Susan M. Reverby in 2010 called ‘Wellesley
professor unearths a horror: Syphilis experiments in Guatemala.’ It
stated how she came across her discovery:
Picking
through musty files in a Pennsylvania archive, a Wellesley College
professor made a heart-stopping discovery: US government scientists
in the 1940s deliberately infected hundreds of Guatemalans with
syphilis and gonorrhea in experiments conducted without the subjects’
permission. Medical historian Susan M. Reverby happened upon the
documents four or five years ago while researching the infamous
Tuskegee syphilis study and later shared her findings with US
government officials.
The
unethical research was not publicly disclosed until yesterday, when
President Obama and two Cabinet secretaries apologized to Guatemala’s
government and people and pledged to never repeat the mistakes of the
past — an era when it was not uncommon for doctors to experiment on
patients without their consent.
After
Reverby’s discovery, the Obama administration apparently gave an
apology to then-President Alvaro Colom according to the Boston Globe:
Yesterday,
Obama called President Álvaro Colom Caballeros of Guatemala to
apologize, and Obama’s spokesman told reporters the experiment was
“tragic, and the United States by all means apologizes to all those
who were impacted by this.
Secretary
of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had called Colom Thursday night to
break the news to him. In her conversation with the Guatemalan
president, Clinton expressed “her personal outrage and deep regret
that such reprehensible research could occur,’’ said Arturo
Valenzuela, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere
affairs.
The study in Guatemala was led by John Cutler, a US health service physician who also took part in the controversial Tuskegee Syphilis experiments which began in the 1930’s. Researchers wanted to study the effects of a group of antibiotics called penicillin on affected individuals. The prevention and treatment of syphilis and other venereal diseases were also included in the experimentation.
Although they were treated with antibiotics, more
than 83 people had died according to BBC news in 2011 following a
statement issued by Dr Amy Gutmann, head of the Presidential
Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues:
The
Commission said some 5,500 Guatemalans were involved in all the
research that took place between 1946 and 1948. Of these, some 1,300
were deliberately infected with syphilis, gonorrhoea or another
sexually transmitted disease, chancroid. And of that group only about
700 received some sort of treatment. According to documents the
commission had studied, at least 83 of the 5,500 subjects had died by
the end of 1953.
Washington’s
reaction to the report is a farce. The apology made to Guatemala’s
government was for the sake of public relations. Washington knows
about its human experimentations in the past with deadly diseases
conducted by government-funded laboratories that are known to be
harmful to the public. The U.S. government is guilty in conducting
numerous medical experiments on people not only in Guatemala but in
other countries and on its own territory. As the Boston Globe report
mentioned, the Tuskegee Syphilis Study occurred between 1932 and 1972
by the U.S. Public Health Service to study the “natural
progression” of untreated
syphilis in the African American population. The U.S. Public Health
Service and the Tuskegee Institute collaborated in 1932 and enrolled
600 poor sharecroppers from Macon County, Alabama to study the
syphilis infection.
However, it was documented that at least 400 of
those had the disease (they were never informed that they actually
had syphilis) while the remaining 200 did not. They received free
medical care, food and even free burial insurance for participating
in the study. Documents revealed that they were told that they
had “bad blood” which
meant that they had various medical conditions besides syphilis. The
Tuskegee scientists continued to study the participants without
treating their illnesses and they also withheld much-needed
information from the participants about penicillin, which proved to
be effective in treating Syphilis and other venereal diseases. The
test subjects were under the impression that they were receiving free
health care from the U.S. government while they were deliberately
being lied to by the same administrators who were conducting the
tests. Washington is fully aware of its human experimentations with
deadly diseases. The government of Guatemala also knew about the
Syphilis experiments according to the Boston Globe:
A
representative of the Guatemalan government said his nation will
investigate, too — looking in part at the culpability of officials
in that country. The records of the experiment suggest that
Guatemalan government officials were fully aware of the tests,
sanctioned them, and may have done so in exchange for stockpiles of
penicillin.
However,
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services published the
study ‘Fact Sheet on the 1946-1948 U.S. Public
Health Service Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STD) Inoculation
Study’ and was forced to
admit what happened in Guatemala during the syphilis experiments:
While
conducting historical research on the Tuskegee Study of Untreated
Syphilis, Professor Susan Reverby of Wellesley College recently
discovered the archived papers of the late Dr. John Cutler, a U.S.
Public Health Service medical officer and a Tuskegee investigator.
The papers described another unethical study supported by the U.S.
government in which highly vulnerable populations in Guatemala were
intentionally infected with sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). The
study, conducted between 1946 and 1948, was done with the knowledge
of Dr. Cutler’s superiors and was funded by a grant from the U.S.
National Institutes of Health to the Pan American Sanitary Bureau
(which became the Pan American Health Organization) to several
Guatemalan government ministries. The study had never been published.
The
U.S. government admitted to its wrongdoing, 62 years too late. What
Dr. Broderick wrote is not conspiratorial in any sense. The U.S.
government has been involved in bioterrorism; Guatemala is a case in
point. Dr. Broderick summarized what average people can do to prevent
governments, especially those from the West from creating and
exposing populations from diseases they experiment with in
laboratories:
The
challenge is global, and we request assistance from everywhere,
including China, Japan, Australia, India, Germany, Italy, and even
kind-hearted people in the U.S., France, the U.K., Russia, Korea,
Saudi Arabia, and anywhere else whose desire is to help. The
situation is bleaker than we on the outside can imagine, and we must
provide assistance however we can. To ensure a future that has less
of this kind of drama, it is important that we now demand that our
leaders and governments be honest, transparent, fair, and
productively engaged. They must answer to the people. Please stand up
to stop Ebola testing and the spread of this dastardly diseчase.
After
Guatemala’s ordeal with the U.S. government who deliberately
infected people with syphilis, West African nations should be
extremely skeptical about the U.S. government’s actions combating
Ebola. Professor Francis Boyle of the University of Illinois, College
of Law questions the Obama administration’s actions in West Africa.
RIA Novosti recently interviewed Boyle and he said the following:
US
government agencies have a long history of carrying out allegedly
defensive biological warfare research at labs in Liberia and Sierra
Leone. This includes the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), which is now the point agency for managing the Ebola
spill-over into the US,” Prof. Francis Boyle said.
Why
has the Obama administration dispatched troops to Liberia when they
have no training to provide medical treatment to dying Africans? How
did Zaire/Ebola get to West Africa from about 3,500km away from where
it was first identified in 1976?”
That’s
a good question for Washington, but would the public get any answers?
Not anytime soon, since it took more than 62 years for the Guatemala
syphilis experiments to be exposed to the public, not by the US
government, by a medical historian.
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