The award of a £32m contract to supply the NHS with a smallpox vaccine is
not linked to donations to the Labour Party, says the government.
The Department for Health (DoH) confirmed on Friday it had bought a
stockpile of the vaccine to protect half the UK population against a
smallpox attack.
The deal is with British company PowderJect Pharmaceuticals, whose
owner Paul Drayson donated £50,000 to Labour in July 2001, according to
the Electoral Commission website.
The Conservative Party is now demanding an investigation.
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Smallpox facts
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Can transmit through air
Kills about 30% of those infected
No cure
First symptoms can be mistaken for flu
Officially eradicated in 1980 after global vaccination
First used as weapon by British against Native Americans in 18th
century
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But the government has denied any impropriety in the award of the
contract, which has infuriated rival drug producers who say they were not
given a chance to bid.
Dr John Brown is chief executive of Acambis Plc, one of several
companies initially approached by the UK Government and currently
manufacturing 200m doses of a smallpox vaccine for the US.
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "It's unlikely that anyone would
be able to get a fully clinically-tested vaccine before us."
He said he had not been officially told Acambis had missed out on the
contract.
Decision defended
Health Minister John Hutton, speaking on the same programme, said: "The
reason why PowderJect was given the contract, as we've tried to make
clear, was for one reason and one reason alone.
"They were the only company which could provide the type of vaccine we
wanted as quickly as possible.
"Dr Brown's company make a different strain of the vaccine and we
decided, having looked at the issues very carefully, not to procure the
particular strain that his company manufacturers."
Hutton: no impropriety
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Mr Hutton said advice was sought from the permanent secretary at the
Department of Health, who confirmed the contract should be placed with
PowderJect.
The minister said the industry could not have been told in advance of
the award because of commercial confidentiality.
But Tim Collins MP, Conservative vice-chairman, demanded an inquiry and
the establishment of a cross-party group to supervise all party donations.
Infectious
He told the Today programme: "This is bound to happen until we have a
proper culture of openness and a proper mechanism where we don't have to
take ministers' words for it."
Referring to previous 'cash-for-favours' claims, Mr Collins said the
smallpox contract could be "another coincidence in a long chain of
coincidences after Mittal, Enron and Formula One".
Liberal Democrat MP Norman Baker said: "We've a situation where someone
who has given money to the Labour party has won a contract in less than
open circumstances.
"Now part of that is the fact that the British Government, and
successive governments, have an endemic secrecy at its heart.
"We are not treated like adults in this country like in the US."
Both the US and Russia have already stockpiled anti-smallpox vaccines
in the wake of 11 September, amid fears of germ warfare.
A DoH spokesman has said the smallpox vaccine was being bought "as part
of the government's continuing vigilance against international terrorism",
although there was no "credible threat".