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Did a Stolen
Virus Cause ...
Test Tube Taken From Porton Down Lab Two Months Before Outbreak
A test tube
containing the foot-and-mouth virus went missing from a top-secret laboratory
two months before the outbreak was first reported.
Now it appears that the disease which has crippled rural Britain
could have been an act of sabotage by a rogue worker. The Ministry of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Food was alerted when a sample of live virus was reported missing
at Porton Down, Wiltshire, following a routine audit.
The test tube was stored in a highly sensitive laboratory where
scientists also hold other diseases, including smallpox, TB, Ebola and anthrax.
The shocking revelation from the Government laboratory undermines
the ministry’s account of the rapid spread of the disease and raises questions
of a massive Government cover-up. It also supports documents which clearly
reveal that sheep in parts of the UK were carrying the virus long before
the outbreak was confirmed on February 20.
According to a report by a French vet, it was detected in a Welsh
flock as early as January.
Timber merchants around Britain say that in early February they
were approached by the Ministry for wood supplies to burn animals with foot-and-mouth.
Agriculture Minister Nick Brown has told MPs the earliest-known
case was on a pig farm in Tyne and Wear on February 20.
He insisted the approaches to timber merchants were part of a
‘regular contingency planning exercise’. He said: ‘There are a number of
urban legends doing the rounds that the ministry knew about this disease
before. That is not true.’
Questions will be tabled in Parliament this week about the Porton
Down link, and several MPs say they intend to give Mr Brown a ‘hard time’.
Tory MP Owen Paterson said: ‘There are very persistent rumours
over missing phials from Porton Down linked to animal rights activists.’
What I do know is that there is evidence this disease has been
round a lot longer than the Government will admit. I specifically asked Nick
Brown last week that if the outbreak was first revealed in February, then
how come sheep exported from Wales to France were carrying the virus on January
31? He gave me a lame answer and also denied it. Yet I know for a fact that
a Mr Hugues Inizan exported sheep to France and they tested positive.
Foot-and-mouth takes a minimum of two to three weeks to incubate,
so those sheep obviously had the virus a lot longer.’
Tim Collins, Tory MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale, said: ‘If it
emerges that the Government knew about a potential outbreak before the end
of February, there will be an explosion of anger in my constituency.’
Bob Parry, president of the NFU in Wales, said: ‘We must get to
the bottom of this mystery because no one has yet given a convincing explanation
about the beginning of the outbreak. News of the stolen virus began circulating
last week. Swill feeding is still being wrongly blamed. There is mounting
evidence the disease started well before February.’
A senior military source close to Porton Down said: ‘A phial appears
to have gone missing from one of the labs following a routine audit last
year.’
‘Ministry officials were informed immediately and an investigation
was launched initially by Special Branch and then by M15, who are interested
in the activities of animal rights protesters.’
Porton Down was rocked by scandal last August after samples of
TB bacteria were wrongly sent to a Plymouth shop.
A spokesman for the Department of Health refused to comment on
the missing test tube. But an Agriculture Ministry spokesman said the matter
was being investigated.
Source: Sunday
Express, 8 April 2001
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