http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,529534,00.html
|
|
Illegal
vaccine link to Gulf war syndrome Scientists in the United
States found that symptoms of the illness were the same for service personnel
who received the injections whether or not they served in the Gulf. The common factor for
the 275,000 British and US veterans who are ill appears to be a substance
called squalene, allegedly used in injections to add to their potency. Such
an action would have been illegal. Squalene is not licensed for use on either
side of the Atlantic because of potential side effects. Pam Asa and her team at
the Tulane medical school in Louisiana tested more than 300 former US military
personnel who were given vaccinations to go to the Gulf: 95% tested positive
for squalene antibodies. In addition veterans
from both sides of the Atlantic were tested, including 20 who were given
preparatory injections but who did not go to the war. All 20 tested positive
to squalene antibodies. The first non-deployed
British sufferer to be tested, Anwen Humphreys, was also found to have
antibodies. Dr Asa said in her view
the fact that even non-deployed veterans were testing positive for squalene provided
conclusive evidence that vaccinations were a "major cause" of the
condition. It ruled out the alternative environmental theories floated as
causes of Gulf war syndrome. "I believe that
those people who were given vaccinations in the US and the UK were given
something they should not have been, probably in the anthrax vaccine. [The
results] need a thorough examination by the US and UK governments." Squalene is classed as
an ad juvant - a chemical which is added to a vaccine to make it more combative.
It is a naturally occurring substance in the human body but injecting it is
illegal, and past scientific research in rats and mice has found that it
causes auto-immune disease. Consequently, squalene in the form of a vaccine
is unlicensed for human or veterinary use. The evidence could be
devastating for the Ministry of Defence which is being sued for damages by
1,900 British veterans. If they show they were injected with an illegal
substance, the damages could be astronomical. The ministry has refused
toreveal what was in the injections. Ms Humphreys, 39, from
Dolgellau, north Wales, who suffers typical symptoms of the syndrome - severe
headaches, nausea, muscular pain, joint swelling, short term memory loss and
depression - said: "I believe the MoD has used us like guinea pigs to
see how effective squalene is. "There are no words
to describe what they have done. It's just medically, morally and ethically
wrong." She says she feels
"cheated" by the MoD. "I was always one of these people who
said that there is no way they would experiment with our vaccinations." Ms Humphreys' story is
being told tonight on the Welsh-language current affairs programme, Y Byd Ar
Bedwar, (The World On Four), on S4C. The US defence department has strongly
denied Dr Asa's claims. Lewis Moonie, a junior
minister responsible for veterans, said: "To the best of my knowledge no
squalene was given to any member of the British forces at the time of the
Gulf war." The Ministry of Defence
has so far refused to disclose what was in the injections and defence
scientists are carrying out experiments on animals to see what effects the
Gulf war injections could have. The results will not be known until 2003. |
ALL
INFORMATION, DATA, AND MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR
GENERAL INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE
KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED
AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO
VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU
ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.