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Did a Stolen
Virus Cause…
Vaccination Works!
Lies that are spreading this plague
by Jonathan Dimbleby, President of the Soil Association
At the moment,
it matters not a jot whether Tony Blair takes his holiday in Tuscany or Cumbria
or, for that matter, Kosovo. Nor does it matter whether No 10 rapped the
knuckles of the footloose Environment Minister, Michael Meacher, for jumping
the gun by decreeing a public inquiry into the origins of the foot-and-mouth
catastrophe.
For farmers and everyone else whose livelihoods are on the line
as a result of this scourge, the only issue that matters is whether the policy
of mass slaughter is right or wrong.
As a journalist who is also a farmer, I am baffled by those who
put their faith in pyres, I am also appalled by the methods used by advocates
of this macabre rite of animal passage to denigrate the alternative: a carefully
targeted programme of mass vaccination.
As president of the Soil Association (which leads the organic
movement), I am familiar with efforts of adversaries to vilify our stance
on pesticides, chemicals, antibiotics and GM foods. But the anti-vaccination
brigade is in a different league of obfuscation and distortion.
From the start, the Soil Association had qualms about the slaughter
policy. When it became obvious that foot-and-mouth was out of control, we
went public with a strategy which offered the nation the only available prospect
of an early reprieve from the mass carnage that had become a nightly horror
show with a worldwide audience.
For more than three weeks, we have urged that an emergency programme
of vaccination be introduced alongside the slaughter policy, both to damp
down the disease within hot spots such as Cumbria and Devon, and to form
a firebreak around those areas where there is a significant cluster of cases.
Our reasoning is simple but sound: the evidence gathered from
the most eminent sources around the world is compelling. Vaccination works.
If you need any confirmation of that, look at what they did in Holland as
soon as they had an outbreak, stopping the disease in its tracks.
Healthy
Ministers, up to and including the Prime Minister, have listened
to our case with evident understanding and apparent approval but – so far
– nothing has changed. Six weeks after the outbreak was first detected, vaccination,
in the words of the Agriculture Minister Nick Brown, remains a ‘last resort’.
In the meantime, the ‘first’ resort has entailed the massacre
of more than one million cattle, sheep and pigs. Almost all of these – 95 %
– were healthy animals which had the misfortune to be within a danger zone.
On the present course, another million are likely to face the
same fate. A further one-and-a-half million are to be slaughtered in the ‘welfare’
cull of flocks and herds which are suffering because the restriction on livestock
movements in infected zones means they cannot be given adequate food or care.
The ballooning cost of compensation to farmers alone is expected
to drain the Treasury of £1 billion. While most of the countryside
remains firmly ‘closed for business’, the financial loss to allied enterprises
and to the tourist trade is already a calamity.
No one knows how long it will be before the disease is eliminated,
or the eventual cost. The Treasury talks about £3 billion – equivalent
to a penny on income tax. Others foresee losses of up to £9 billion.
Some economists predict a fall of more than half a percent in Britain’s growth
rate this year.
That is the price of putting in place a scorched-earth policy
to re-establish an export industry in live animals that is itself built around
a crazy system of Common Agricultural Policy subsidies that indirectly sustain
agribusiness attitudes which turn sheep into commodities and dealers into
brokers.
But vaccination is not only a ‘last resort’: it is vigorously
opposed. The Ministry of Agriculture and the National Farmers’ Union (NFU)
have formed an unholy alliance which appears to have secured an arm-lock on
Government policy.
Yet they have achieved this pyrrhic victory only by arming themselves
with a quiverful of myths in which they may sincerely believe, but which
fly in the face of scientific evidence.
Ineffective
Among the most damaging of these myths are the claims:
(1) vaccination is ineffective; (2) vaccinated animals would
have to be slaughtered in any case; (3) milk and meat from vaccinated animals
could not be sold for human consumption; and (4) vaccination would unnecessarily
postpone the date at which Britain would regain its disease-free status –
without which no animals or meat exports can leave these shores.
False or
thoroughly misleading
As even a cursory reading of the available evidence from Europe and the
U.S. Department of Agriculture shows quite clearly, all these claims are
either false or thoroughly misleading. The research shows that vaccination
gives 100% protection to healthy animals – and even if an animal already
incubating the disease was to become a carrier after vaccination, it would
be extremely unlikely to transmit the infection to others in the herd; in
any case, the virus would rapidly die out for lack of hosts in which to take
up residence.
Nor is there any regulation either in the UK or in the EU which
requires the slaughter of vaccinated animals.
And as for being a threat to human health, you can consume milk
and meat from vaccinated cows, sheep and pigs without any risk – the great
majority of animals entering the food chain are already vaccinated against
a range of endemic diseases.
As to our disease-free status, the international regulations
are unambiguous: we would be able to re-establish these coveted rights 12
months from the date on which the last animal is either slaughtered or vaccinated
– whichever date is later. Legally, there is nothing to choose between either
approach.
So if the case against vaccination collapses under even the mildest
interrogation, what stands in its way? It is not as though the farming community
has much confidence in the slaughter policy. Most farmers I know are convinced
the disease has already spread far beyond the hot spots and that the pyres
will never catch it up.
Nor do they have much faith in the Ministry of Agriculture, which
they tend to believe is led by penpushing rejects from other parts of Whitehall
and scientists who are inside the ministry only because they couldn’t get
a decent job outside.
A lot of farmers are also infuriated by the metropolitan assumption
that the NFU always speaks on their behalf – even when, as in this
case, its principle motive appears to be to ensure that the Government showers
its stricken members with financial compensation on an unprecedented scale
and never turns off the tap.
Radical
Given half a chance and a fair analysis of the facts, farmers
who really care about the future would leap at vaccination. As they are quite
capable of inoculating their own animals, the programme could be underway
within days.
Very soon after that, most of the pyres could be extinguished,
the bulldozers could be removed from the burial grounds, the Army could return
to barracks and the countryside could at last be genuinely re-opened for
business and pleasure.
When this is over, there must be great reckoning and radical
reform. For the moment, the message is simple: stop vacillating and start
vaccinating.
Source: Daily
Mail, 6 April 2001
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