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-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, July 4th, 1997
-
- Beef fraud re-opens row with Europe
- By Toby Helm, EU Correspondent, in Brussels
-
- A BELGIAN "beef mafia" has exploited lax controls at British ports to
- smuggle out at least 1,600 tons of meat in contravention of the European
- Union's export ban, according to Brussels.
-
- Disclosures about the gang's activities follow warnings about illegal
- exports issued by the European Commission on Wednesday. They have led to new
- fears over the safety of meat on sale on the Continent and caused the
- Spanish government to impose an import ban on beef from Belgium.
-
- After refusing to give firm details 24 hours earlier for fear of disrupting
- police inquiries, European Commission officials said 700 tons of the beef
- had recently been seized by officers in Holland.
-
- The other 900 tons was thought to have been passed on to Russia and Egypt to
- collect export subsidies. It is believed that those responsible cut off the
- British stamps on the consignments, restamped them as Belgian and gave them
- false Belgian papers.
-
- The sale of British beef abroad is in breach of an export ban imposed by
- Brussels in March last year after evidence was found of a possible link
- between the "mad cow disease" BSE and a fatal brain condition in humans.
-
- Dagmar Roth-Behrendt, a German Euro-MP, who chairs a European Parliament
- committee investigating the BSE crisis, said it seemed that a Belgian
- company was set up last year to profit from sales of banned British beef.
-
- Meat was smuggled out of Britain to Holland with the intention of selling it
- on. Once it reached the Continent the beef became eligible for EU export
- subsidies.
-
- Jack Cunningham, the Agriculture Minister, has written to Emma Bonino, the
- commissioner for consumer affairs, expressing his concern over her claim on
- Wednesday that checks at British ports have been "manifestly inefficient".
-
- A Commission spokesman said legal proceedings were now being considered
- against Britain for failing to ensure that the beef export ban was enforced.
- Ultimately this could lead to a case against the Government in the European
- Court of Justice in Luxembourg.
-
- However, no legal measures were being considered against Belgium or Holland.
- A British official in Brussels said British authorities conducted
- twice-monthly spot checks on loads for export. Loads were also inspected
- when there was reason for suspicion. Mrs Bonino maintains that checks should
- be routine procedure.
-
- David Brown, Agriculture Editor, writes: British officials were furious with
- Brussels yesterday for wrecking an undercover investigation into illegal
- beef shipments.
-
- One official said: "The last thing we wanted to do was alert people that we
- were on to them. The impression has been given that Brussels had found
- something we didn't know about. That is rubbish."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Jul 1997 00:55:50 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Boom remains around Greenpeace ships
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970704005632.1a0714da@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From News Waves (Southam News Site) - Thursday, July 4th, 1997
-
- Boom remains around Greenpeace ships
-
- VANCOUVER - A log boom hemming in two Greenpeace ships remained in place
- Thursday
- after the harbormaster's concerns about the safety of the boom were put to rest.
-
- The boom, rigged Wednesday by woodworkers in retaliation for Greenpeace
- anti-logging
- protests, prevented one of the environmental group's ship from leaving to
- protest the
- Alaskan oil industry.
-
- The harbormaster ordered the logs removed as a safety measure but IWA-Canada
- president
- Dave Haggard said the union has given commitments to release the log booms
- quickly if
- there is any danger.
-
- The harbormaster has also supplied union protesters with a radio for
- communication on the
- emergency channel.
-
- The union said it plans to maintain the picket line until woodworkers are
- paid for wages lost
- during anti-logging protests earlier this summer.
-
- Greenpeace has asked for a meeting with the IWA but Haggard refused.
-
- "I don't return calls to environmental terrorists," he said. "They know the
- conditions that
- we're prepared to meet with them and sit down and talk to them and discuss
- their issues and ours.
-
- "And we haven't been instructed by anybody in our office or by our members
- to change that
- position and we don't intend to."
-
- Greenpeace called a news conference Wednesday to announce the departure of
- its Arctic
- Sunrise, but found the ship encircled by a log boom and without a legally
- required ship's
- pilot.
-
- Information picket signs carried by IWA members kept away the ship pilots
- who normally
- escort large vessels out of the harbor.
-
- The Arctic Sunrise was used to help Greenpeace supporters board a log barge
- on the central B.C. coast last month. Tied up beside it was the Moby Dick,
- a Greenpeace ship that assisted in last month's logging-road blockades near
- Bella Coola, B.C.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------
- [Update - The Artic Sunrise started up its engines late Thurday evening and
- it appeared the crew was going to make an attempt to breakout of the
- blockade. After 20 minutes, however, the engines were stopped and the
- blockade continues.
-
- I will be trying to talk to someone from Greenpeace tomorrow (Friday).]
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Jul 1997 10:23:35 -0400 (EDT)
- From: LexAnima@aol.com
- To: LMANHEIM@aol.com
- Cc: samiller@piper.hamline.edu, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: Court Takes Up Mall Speech Case
- Message-ID: <970704102334_-24452051@emout14.mail.aol.com>
-
- For the rest of the story, please note that the real reason this matter got
- into court is because one student at Hamline University School of Law took
- the time to work with Freeman Wicklund, an excellent activist from the Twin
- Cities. This student helped Freeman put together a brief during her summer
- (known as recooperation time) after her first year of law school. That
- caring student, Stephanie Miller, has yet to be formally thanked for her
- efforts. Honestly, if it weren't for her interest this case could not exist.
- It certainly couldn't have proceeded to the attention of Larry Leventhal, a
- civil rights attorney at Wounded Knee. And guess who helped Larry Leventhal
- with his brief? So this post is to honor the "middle-man" (middle-woman?)
- who made the 6 AM meetings with Larry and the 9 PM meetings with Freeman --
- with precious little help from the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union. I hope
- you make history, Red. I was proud to be there.
-
- D'Arcy Kemnitz
-
- n a message dated 97-07-04 05:32:58 EDT, you write:
-
- <<
- By CHRIS TOMLINSON
- MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Malls have been called the town squares of
- our times, but don't climb atop a soapbox and start stirring up the
- shoppers with a fiery oration.
- Mall owners contend the complexes are private property and not
- subject to the constitutional guarantees of free speech.
- Some free speech advocates argue that the Mall of America - the
- largest shopping and entertainment complex in the country - should
- be given the same status as other public spaces.
- ``The place for fun in your life should also permit the exchange
- of ideas,'' said attorney Larry Leventhal, who represents animal
- rights protesters arrested at the mall.
- Four members of the Animal Liberation League were arrested on
- May 19, 1996, for holding signs and passing out literature
- protesting fur sales outside Macy's department store. They were
- charged with criminal trespass.
- They claim the arrests were a violation of their rights to free
- speech.
- Even though Minneapolis spent $186 million to help build the
- $700 million mall, city officials and the mall's management believe
- it is private property.
- ``The individual's constitutional right is directly antagonistic
- to the purpose of the private institution, which is to make a
- profit,'' said Sandra Johnson, an assistant city attorney
- prosecuting the case.
- In 1972, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that malls are private
- property and not public places, but did allow state courts to rule
- differently. Minnesota courts have never ruled on this issue.
- Hennepin County District Court Judge Jack Nordby, who heard
- arguments Thursday, did not immediately issue a ruling. >>
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Jul 1997 11:01:24 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Snugglezzz@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Lori Gauthier (Kentucky, USA)
- Message-ID: <970704110121_1510553548@emout08.mail.aol.com>
-
- The lady who has been rescuing animals from the Kentucky floods is in URGENT
- need. She's getting ready to be evicted from her grooming shop. Why? Because
- many, many of the animals she rescued and had people fostering/adopting them
- have been RETURNED to her. And, the vets have stopped helping her. Since the
- publicity has died down, people in that area have laid everything back in her
- lap. One of our NOAH members talked to her last week, and she NEEDS HELP,
- financially, AND: Preventatic collars, LICE MEDICINE, and products to get
- the fleas off the animals. I don't have her address with me at home, so if
- any of you still have her address, please post it for those on here who
- would like to help her out again.
- Thanks!!! This is an urgent, urgent situation.
-
-
- Sherrill
- Date: Fri, 04 Jul 1997 10:09:21 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: More deaths linked to Mad Cow Disease
- Message-ID: <33BD2E41.1C7A@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Two more deaths in Britain linked to ailment similar to madcow disease
-
- Agence France-Presse
-
- LONDON (July 3, 1997 8:50 p.m. EDT) - Two more people have died from the
- brain disorder believed to be linked to so-called madcow disease,
- bringing the total deaths in Britain from the ailment to 18, the health
- ministry said Thursday.
-
- One more case has also been diagnosed of the new variant of the fatal
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD-nv), but the patient is still alive, the
- ministry said.
-
- The victims are believed to have been infected by eating beef products
- contaminated by bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), an epidemic of
- which in Britain has caused British beef exports to be banned.
-
- Only one other confirmed death from CJD-nv outside Britain has occurred
- in France.
-
- =============================================================
-
- This may turn out to be the proverbial tip of the iceberg: the
- incubation period for CJD-nv may be as long as 20-30 years.
-
- Andy
- Date: Fri, 04 Jul 1997 10:10:37 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: 94 deaths linked to cancer drugs
- Message-ID: <33BD2E8D.770B@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- 94 deaths in Japan linked to cancer drugs
-
- The Associated Press
-
- TOKYO (July 3, 1997 01:20 a.m. EDT) -- At least 94 people have died from
- the side effects of a drug used against colon, lung and cervical cancer,
- the government announced Wednesday, refusing to disclose details on the
- circumstances until August.
-
- Doctors demanded that the Health and Welfare Ministry release more
- information about the deaths associated with irinotecan hydrochloride.
-
- The ministry said Tuesday that of 5,430 cancer patients treated with the
- drug since April 1994, at least 39, or 0.72 percent, have died from its
- side effects.
-
- In addition, another 55 patients died during the clinical testing before
- it went on the market, said ministry spokesman Hiroshi Yamamoto.
-
- "It's a shocking figure," said Dr. Masanori Fukushima, head of internal
- medicine at Aichi Cancer Institute in central Japan, who earlier said at
- least 50 people had died during the testing.
-
- Yamamoto said the drug was approved for use because the benefits
- outweighed the risks.
-
- "It was a balance between the potential benefit and the harm. And in
- this case we found there would be more benefit," he said.
-
- Officials plan in August to elaborate on Wednesday's revelations and are
- now discussing ways to stop further deaths, said Yamamoto.
-
- The drug is sold under two brand names -- Topotecin, made by Daiichi
- Pharmaceutical Co., and Campto, made by Yakult Honsha Co.
-
- Ministry officials and the pharmaceutical companies said irinotecan can
- cause a sudden reduction in the number of white blood cells, damage to
- blood cells and symptoms such as severe diarrhea and
- pneumonia.
-
- "The clinical testing proved that our products have severe side effects.
- So we have warned the doctors to be aware of the risk," said Daiichi
- Pharmaceutical spokesman Toshio Takahashi. "I'm afraid our products are
- often used inappropriately."
-
- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the drug last year for
- colon cancer treatment.
-
- Yakult said its product is exported to the United States and Europe as
- Camptosar under licensing with Pharmacia & Upjohn, Inc. and
- Rhone-Poulenc Rorer, Inc., but there have been no reports of deaths
- there resulting from side effects.
-
- Some doctors have warned of what they called abnormal mortality rates
- from unintended effects of the drug.
-
- Fukushima said some victims could have been saved if anti-side effects
- drugs, such as colony stimulating factor, had been approved for use
- under health insurance policies.
-
- The Health and Welfare Ministry said colony stimulating factor is
- approved in Japan but health insurance does not cover its use for
- certain types of cancer.
-
- In Japan, unlike in the United States, health insurance cannot pay for
- particular drugs unless approved for that use by the Health Ministry.
-
- Fukushima said health insurance does not cover use of CSF for colon
- cancer treatment, for which irinotecan hydrochloride is most effective.
-
- Tuesday's disclosure is the latest embarrassment for the ministry, which
- already is under fire for a delay in banning untreated blood products.
- The deaths of 2,000 hemophiliacs from AIDS have been blamed on the
- delay.
-
- A former senior official at the ministry was arrested in October in
- connection with the scandal.
-
- --By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press
- Date: Fri, 04 Jul 1997 12:08:22 -0700
- From: Persephone Moonshadow Howling Womyn <moonshadow@persephone.ORG>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FWD: Rachel #553: Let's Stop Wasting Time
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970704120819.0080b530@206.184.139.138>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >>Received: by rachel.clark.net (UUPC/extended 1.12r);
- > Thu, 03 Jul 1997 15:50:08 -0400
- >Date: Thu, 3 Jul 97 15:50:07 -0500
- >From: Peter Montague <peter@rachel.clark.net>
- >Subject: Rachel #553: Let's Stop Wasting Time
- >To: rachel-weekly@world.std.com
- >Sender: montague@world.std.com
- >Reply-To: Peter Montague <peter@rachel.clark.net>
- >
- >=======================Electronic Edition========================
- >. .
- >. RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH WEEKLY #553 .
- >. ---July 3, 1997--- .
- >. HEADLINES: .
- >. LET'S STOP WASTING TIME .
- >. ========== .
- >. Environmental Research Foundation .
- >. P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403 .
- >. Fax (410) 263-8944; Internet: erf@rachel.clark.net .
- >. ========== .
- >. Back issues available by E-mail; to get instructions, send .
- >. E-mail to INFO@rachel.clark.net with the single word HELP .
- >. in the message; back issues also available via ftp from .
- >. ftp.std.com/periodicals/rachel and from gopher.std.com .
- >. and from http://www.monitor.net/rachel/ .
- >. Subscribe: send E-mail to rachel-weekly-request@world.std.com .
- >. with the single word SUBSCRIBE in the message. It's free. .
- >=================================================================
- >
- >LET'S STOP WASTING OUR TIME
- >
- >The mainstream environmental movement spends its time urging
- >government to regulate corporations that are making people sick
- >while poisoning the planet's air, water, and soil. Regulation is
- >what mainstream environmentalists aim to do. They gather data,
- >write reports to show how bad things have gotten, and then they
- >ask government regulators to modify the behavior of the
- >responsible corporations. In Washington, D.C., and in all 50
- >state capitals, hundreds or thousands of environmentalists toil
- >tirelessly year after year after year, proposing new laws, urging
- >new regulations, and opposing the latest efforts by officials
- >(corporate and governmental) to weaken existing laws and
- >regulations. They write letters, meet with agency personnel,
- >publish pamphlets and hold conferences, prepare testimony for
- >subcommittees, serve for years on citizen advisory boards, create
- >"media events," mail out newsletters and magazines, organize
- >phone trees to create awareness and raise funds. They pore over
- >immense volumes of technical information, becoming experts in
- >arcane sub-specialties of science and law. They work hard, much
- >harder than most other people. When they find that their efforts
- >have been ineffective, they redouble their efforts, evidently
- >hoping that more of the same will work better next time.
- >Environmental Defense Fund, Natural Resources Defense Council,
- >Sierra Club, Audubon, National Wildlife Federation, The
- >Wilderness Society, The Environmental Working Group, and many
- >others that make up the mainstream environmental community are
- >well-intentioned, earnest, and diligent. They are also, it must
- >be admitted, largely ineffective.
- >
- >An eye-opening new book describes the nearly-complete failure of
- >all our attempts to regulate the behavior of the chemical
- >corporations. TOXIC DECEPTION, by Dan Fagin and Marianne
- >Lavelle,[1] is subtitled "How the Chemical Industry Manipulates
- >Science, Bends the Law, and Endangers Your Health." In his day
- >job, Dan Fagin writes for NEWSDAY (the Long Island newspaper) and
- >Marianne Lavelle writes for the NATIONAL LAW JOURNAL. Both are
- >award-winning investigative reporters, and this book shows why:
- >it is thorough and thoroughly-documented, even-handed, careful in
- >its conclusions, and absolutely astonishing in how grim a picture
- >it paints of our corporatized democracy. Even those of us who
- >study chemicals-and-health full-time have never put all the
- >pieces together the way these two have.
- >
- >The book is organized as a case study of only four dangerous
- >chemicals: atrazine, alachlor, perchloroethylene and formaldehyde.
- >
- >** Atrazine is a weed killer used on 96% of the U.S. corn crop
- >each year. Introduced in 1958, some 68 to 73 million pounds were
- >used in 1995, making it the best-selling pesticide in the nation.
- >Atrazine interferes with the hormone systems of mammals. In
- >female rats, it causes tumors of the mammary glands, uterus, and
- >ovaries. Two studies have suggested that it causes ovarian
- >cancer in humans. EPA categorizes it as a "possible human
- >carcinogen." Atrazine is found in much of the drinking water in
- >the midwest, and it is measurable in corn, milk, beef and other
- >foods.
- >
- >** In 1989, Monsanto introduced Alachlor, a weed killer that
- >complements atrazine. Atrazine is best against weeds and
- >alachlor is best against grasses. Often both are applied at the
- >same time. Alachlor causes lung tumors in mice; brain tumors in
- >rats; stomach tumors in rats; and tumors of the thyroid gland in
- >rats. It also causes liver degeneration, kidney disease, eye
- >lesions, and cataracts in rats fed high doses. Canada banned
- >alachlor in 1985. EPA's Science Advisory Board labeled alachlor
- >a "probably human carcinogen" in 1986. In 1987, EPA restricted
- >the use of alachlor by requiring that farmers who apply it must
- >first take a short course of instruction. Much of the well water
- >in the midwest now contains alachlor and its use continues
- >unabated.
- >
- >** Perchloroethylene ("perc") is the common chlorinated solvent
- >used in "dry cleaning" (which is only "dry" in the sense that it
- >doesn't use water). In the early 1970s, scientists learned that
- >perc causes liver cancer in mice. Workers in dry cleaning shops
- >get cancer of the esophagus seven times as often as the average
- >American, and they get bladder cancer twice as often. A few
- >communities on Cape Cod in Massachusetts have perc in their
- >drinking water; a study in 1994 revealed that those communities
- >also have leukemia rates five to eight times the national
- >average. Perc is ranked as a "probable human carcinogen" and we
- >all take it into our homes whenever we pick up the dry cleaning.
- >
- >** Formaldehyde is a naturally-occurring substance present in the
- >human body in very small quantities. Mixed with urea,
- >formaldehyde makes a glue that handily holds plywood and particle
- >board together. Mixed with a soap, urea-formaldehyde makes a
- >stiff foam that has excellent insulating properties. After the
- >oil shortage of 1973, Americans began to conserve fuel oil by
- >tightening and insulating their homes, and it was then that
- >people discovered that formaldehyde can be toxic. In tens of
- >thousands of individuals, urea-formaldehyde has caused flu-like
- >symptoms, rashes, and neurological illnesses. In some people, it
- >triggers multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS), a life-long,
- >debilitating sensitivity to many other chemicals, including
- >fragrances and perfumes. In recent years, scientists have
- >confirmed that formaldehyde causes rare nasal tumors in mice and
- >in industrial workers exposed to high levels of formaldehyde gas.
- >It is also linked to brain tumors in people exposed to it on the
- >job (embalmers and anatomists). It is ranked as a "probable
- >human carcinogen" in humans, and we are all widely exposed to it
- >through cabinets, furniture, walls and flooring.
- >
- >TOXIC DECEPTION documents how the manufacturers of these
- >chemicals --and thousands of others like them --have managed to
- >keep their dangerous, cancer-causing products on the market
- >despite hugely expensive government regulatory efforts, civil
- >litigation by citizens who feel victimized, investigative news
- >reports, congressional oversight of the regulators, right-to-know
- >laws, and hundreds of scientific studies confirming harm to
- >humans and the environment. The book documents how corporations
- >buy the complicity of politicians; offer jobs, junkets and
- >sometimes threats to regulators; pursue scorched-earth courtroom
- >strategies; shape, manipulate, and sometimes falsify science; and
- >spend millions of dollars on misleading advertising and public
- >relations to deflect public concerns. In sum, the book shows how
- >corporations have turned the regulatory system --and those who
- >devote their lives to working within that system --into their
- >best allies.
- >
- >After reading this book, one realizes that the purpose of the
- >regulatory system is not to protect human health and the
- >environment. The purpose of the regulatory system is to protect
- >the property rights of the corporations, using every branch of
- >government to thwart any serious attempts by citizens to assert
- >that human rights should take precedence. "At the most
- >fundamental level," write Fagin and Lavelle, "the federal
- >regulatory system is driven by the economic imperatives of the
- >chemical manufacturers--to expand markets and profits--and not by
- >its mandate to protect public health."(pg. 13) Why are so many
- >of us still defining our environmental work entirely within the
- >confines of this hopeless system?
- >
- >After 27 years of unremitting, well-meaning attempts to regulate
- >corporate polluters, here is our situation:
- >
- >** The government does not screen chemicals for safety before
- >they go on the market.
- >
- >** Chemicals are presumed innocent until members of the public
- >can prove them guilty of causing harm. Naturally this guarantees
- >that people will be hurt before control can even be considered.
- >After harm has been widely documented, then government begins to
- >gather data on a chemical, but "the agency usually relies on
- >research conducted by or for manufacturers when it is time to
- >make a decision about regulating a toxic chemical."(pg. 14)
- >
- >** Industry manipulates scientific studies to reach the desired
- >conclusions. According to Fagin and Lavelle, when chemical
- >corporations paid for 43 scientific studies of any of the four
- >chemicals (atrazine, alachlor, perc or formaldehyde), 32 studies
- >(74%) returned results favorable to the chemicals involved, 5
- >were ambivalent, and 6 (14%) were unfavorable.(pg. 51) When
- >independent nonindustry organizations --government agencies,
- >universities or medical/charitable organizations (such as the
- >March of Dimes) --paid for 118 studies of the same four
- >chemicals, only 27 of the studies (23%) gave results favorable to
- >the chemicals involved, 20 were ambivalent, and 71 (60%) were
- >unfavorable.(pg. 51)
- >
- >** As of 1994, after 24 years of trying, EPA had issued
- >regulations for only 9 chemicals.(pg. 12) EPA has officially
- >registered only 150 pesticides, though there are thousands of
- >others in daily use awaiting review by the agency.(pg. 11) The
- >Occupational Safety and Health Administration has done only
- >slightly better, setting limits on 24 chemicals after 18 years of
- >effort.(pg. 81)
- >
- >** Close to 2000 new chemicals are introduced into commercial
- >channels each year in the U.S., virtually none of then screened
- >for safety by government prior to introduction. When screening
- >does occur, it occurs AFTER trouble has become apparent. All
- >together, about 70,000 different chemicals are now in commercial
- >use, with nearly 6 trillion pounds produced annually in the U.S.
- >for plastics, solvents, glues, dyes, fuels, and other uses. All
- >six trillion pounds eventually enter the environment.
- >
- >More than 80% of these chemicals have never been screened to
- >learn whether they cause cancer, much less screened to discover
- >if they harm the nervous system, the immune system, the endocrine
- >system, or the reproductive system. In sum, in the vast majority
- >of cases, nothing is known about the health or environmental
- >consequences of dumping these chemicals into the environment.
- >It's a huge corporate experiment on the public.
- >
- >The corporations use a single line of defense: we don't know FOR
- >SURE how dangerous these chemicals really are. But this simple
- >strategy works perfectly because Congress has placed the burden
- >of proof on the public, not on the corporations. We have to
- >prove that we have been harmed. Because we are all exposed to
- >hundreds if not thousands of chemicals each day, pinpointing the
- >source of a rash, a headache, or a brain tumor is next to
- >impossible. Meanwhile the exposures continue. The dice in this
- >game are loaded. Why do we continue to play?
- >
- >Instead, why doesn't the environmental movement come together to
- >discuss a new strategy --one that asserts the right of a
- >sovereign people to control subordinate entities like
- >corporations? We could lawfully shift the burden of proof onto
- >the purveyors of poisons. We could legitimately deny them the
- >protections of the Bill of Rights. (Rule of thumb: if it doesn't
- >breathe, it isn't protected as a person under the Constitution).
- >We could legally define what corporations can and cannot do, JUST
- >AS OUR GREAT GRANDPARENTS DID IN THE EARLY DAYS OF THE REPUBLIC.
- >(See REHW #488 and #489.) Such a program would no doubt have
- >enormous popular appeal because so many people have been treated
- >with injustice and disrespect by one corporation or another in
- >recent years. Why keep wasting our time? Let's get together and
- >focus our energy on DEFINING (not regulating) corporations. It's
- >the only way we'll ever achieve environmental protection. And it
- >would give people some control over their lives once again.
- >
- > --Peter Montague
- > (National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981/AFL-CIO)
- >===============
- >[1] Dan Fagin, Marianne Lavelle, and the Center for Public
- >Integrity, TOXIC DECEPTION (Secaucus, N.J.: Carol Publishing
- >Group, 1996).
- >
- >Descriptor terms: chemical industry; regulation; environmental
- >movement; edf; nrdc; sierra club; wilderness society; epa;
- >environmental defense fund; natural resources defense council;
- >formaldehyde; toxic deception; perchloroethylene; perc; alachlor;
- >atrazine; ewg; environmental working group; pesticides;
- >herbicides; cancer; carcinogens; mcs;
- >
- >################################################################
- > NOTICE
- >Environmental Research Foundation provides this electronic
- >version of RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH WEEKLY free of charge
- >even though it costs our organization considerable time and money
- >to produce it. We would like to continue to provide this service
- >free. You could help by making a tax-deductible contribution
- >(anything you can afford, whether $5.00 or $500.00). Please send
- >your tax-deductible contribution to: Environmental Research
- >Foundation, P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403-7036. Please do
- >not send credit card information via E-mail. For further
- >information about making tax-deductible contributions to E.R.F.
- >by credit card please phone us toll free at 1-888-2RACHEL.
- > --Peter Montague, Editor
- >################################################################
- >
- >
- >
- >
- --
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~~~
- "Life shrinks or expands in| <moonshadow@persephone.org>
- proportion to one's courage."| <ckruger@igc.apc.org>
- -Anais Nin-| http://www.persephone.org
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~~~
- My PGP Public Key can be found at: http://www.persephone.org/PGPKEY.shtml/
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~~~
- Date: Fri, 04 Jul 1997 15:53:00 -0400
- From: Wyandotte Animal Group <wag@heritage.com>
- To: Snugglezzz@aol.com
- Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: Lori Gauthier (Kentucky, USA)
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970704195300.29cf6bfe@mail.heritage.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- At 11:01 AM 7/4/97 -0400, you wrote:
- >The lady who has been rescuing animals from the Kentucky floods is in URGENT
- >need. She's getting ready to be evicted from her grooming shop. Why? Because
- >many, many of the animals she rescued and had people fostering/adopting them
- >have been RETURNED to her. And, the vets have stopped helping her. Since the
- >publicity has died down, people in that area have laid everything back in her
- >lap. One of our NOAH members talked to her last week, and she NEEDS HELP,
- >financially, AND: Preventatic collars, LICE MEDICINE, and products to get
- >the fleas off the animals. I don't have her address with me at home, so if
- >any of you still have her address, please post it for those on here who
- >would like to help her out again.
- >Thanks!!! This is an urgent, urgent situation.
-
- Lori's address and phone for any that wish to contribute is:
-
-
- Lori Gauthier
- A Dog's Life
- 2342 US Hwy 68
- Maysville, KY 41056
- 606-759-4600
-
-
-
- Jason Alley
- Wyandotte Animal Group
- wag@heritage.com
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Jul 1997 17:57:18 -0400 (EDT)
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, Z10103@aol.com
- Subject: [VA] hunting/fishing rights amendment
- Message-ID: <970704175718_274821462@emout09.mail.aol.com>
-
- Friday, July 4, 1997
-
- Dolan proposes hunting, fishing rights amendment
- He seeks attorney general post
-
- ROANOKE -- Democratic attorney general candidate Bill Dolan yesterday
- made what he called a ''pre-emptive strike'' against the animal-rights
- movement by proposing a state constitutional amendment to protect the
- rights of hunters and fishers.
-
- Flanked by state legislators who said they would push for the amendment
- during next year's General Assembly session, Dolan said at a news
- conference that he is troubled that hunting and fishing restrictions
- were approved by voters in five states last year.
-
- ''We must act here in Virginia before those who seek to restrict hunting
- and fishing set their sights on Virginia,'' Dolan said.
-
- The Arlington lawyer's amendment reads: ''The citizens have a right to
- hunt, fish, and take game in a safe manner, subject only to the rights
- of the owners of affected real property and to reasonable restrictions
- related to harvest, licensure, seasons, limits, and methods, times, and
- locations of taking game, and to the health and safety of the citizens
- of the Commonwealth, as prescribed by law.''
-
- Del. A. Victor Thomas, D-Roanoke, an enthusiastic sportsman and likely
- sponsor of the amendment bill, said legislators will work to put the
- pro-hunting language in the state constitution regardless of who is
- elected this November. Dolan is running against Republican state Sen.
- Mark L. Earley of Chesapeake.
-
- ''It will be an issue to be debated next year,'' said Thomas. ''If the
- Lord's willing and the creek don't rise, it will be introduced.''
-
- Earley said it was ironic that such a proposal would come from Dolan.
-
- ''He is a longtime supporter of gun control and the limitation of Second
- Amendment rights,'' Earley said. ''In this race Dolan seems to be to
- suiting up in camouflage, not blaze orange.''
-
- Spokeswoman Anne Kincaid said Earley could not say whether he would
- support the proposed amendment without seeing it, but noted he had a
- 10-year record of strong support for rights of hunters and fishermen in
- Virginia.
-
- Dolan and Thomas noted that the animal-rights group People for the
- Ethical Treatment of Animals is based in Norfolk, and they suggested the
- organization would soon open a campaign to restrict hunting in the
- commonwealth.
-
- PETA spokeswoman Jenny Woods scoffed at Dolan's proposed amendment and
- noted that current Virginia law already bars activists from harassing
- hunters.
-
- ''Dolan's amendment is nothing but a chest-beating exercise meant to
- elicit cheers from those who enjoy torturing animals for fun,'' Woods
- said. ''We feel legislation singling out one group for special
- protection is unconstitutional, and if we have to we'll challenge it.''
-
- To amend the constitution, the General Assembly must vote to hold a
- referendum, wait until after the next statewide election, then vote
- again to have the referendum. The amendment is then put before voters.
-
- Dolan said the constitutional amendment doesn't offer any protection to
- hunters and fishers not already afforded by current state laws, but
- putting pro-hunting language into the constitution would create a higher
- hurdle for groups seeking to restrict hunting or fishing in the future.
-
- He noted that eight states held referendums last year on various hunting
- restrictions, and the strictures passed in five states. Next year Ohio
- voters will decide whether to ban dove hunting.
-
- Alabama is considering an amendment to its constitution giving hunters
- more protections against restrictions, Dolan said, and Virginia should
- consider doing so as well.
-
- ''All over Virginia, there are thousands of mothers and fathers who take
- their children hunting and fishing every year,'' he said. ''We need to
- make sure this time-honored Virginia tradition is preserved.''
-
- Up to now, ethics reform in government has been the staple of Dolan's
- campaign. Yesterday he said the issue of hunters' and fishers' rights
- will strike a chord with state voters.
-
- ''Lots of people don't hunt or fish,'' he said, ''but they still like
- that part of Virginia's history.''
- Date: Fri, 4 Jul 1997 18:43:19 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Snugglezzz@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Address for Lori Gauthier
- Message-ID: <970704184317_-158683739@emout17.mail.aol.com>
-
- Saucy emailed me Lori's address from her BunnyHuggers' Gazette:
-
- Lori Gauthier
- "A Dog's Life"
- 2342 U.S. Hwy 68
- Maysville, KY 41056
-
- PHONE: 606-759-4600
-
- There's also a bank account set up for the animals' rescue, but I don't have
- that address yet.
- Again, she needs (DESPERATELY): money, lice medicine, preventic collars, and
- flea prevention products. THANKS!!
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Fri, 04 Jul 1997 17:14:59 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FWD: Sperm whales entangled in fishing nets
- Message-ID: <33BD9203.6A45@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- From: Museo di Storia Naturale <msnm@imiucca.csi.unimi.it>
-
- Sperm whales entangled in pelagic drifting nets
-
- In a single week two sperm whales still alive have been entangled in
- drifting nets in the waters of the Southern Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy.
- The first has been found during the night of the 9th of June, about 5
- miles off the Calabrian coasts. It was 12 meters long; it had a big
- portion of the net around the lower jaw and a second one around the
- tail. The two portions were connected by a string of net along one side
- of the body. As the specimen was particularly restless, two days of work
- were necessary to cut the net.
-
- The 14th of June a second sperm whale, a male 10 meters long, has been
- found entangled, about 13 miles offshore, in the same area. The net was
- around the body and the tail. Even if in this case the specimen was
- quiet, many hours occurred to release it. The portion of the net around
- the tail weighed more than 100 kilos.
-
- G. Paolillo (representing the Italian stranding network Centro Studi
- Cetacei) directed the operations to release the sperm whales, with the
- help of the scuba divers of Italian Finance Police.
-
- In this area many striped dolphins, with amputations or clear marks of
- entanglement in a fishing net, strand every year in these months. In the
- same period many fishing boats using surface pelagic drifting nets to
- catch swordfish are working in the area.
-
- The legal length of this kind of net in Italy is <2.5 km; we have no
- certainty of its respect, that in any case is not a safety measure for
- marine mammals. As the majority of the data that we collect are about
- cetacean found stranded on the Italian coasts, a lot of bycatches remain
- probably unknown. We think that the few data we have are enough to
- produce a big concern on cetacean conservation. In this connection many
- environmental associations are asking for the total ban of this fishing
- gear.
-
- dr. Michela Podesta'
- Centro Studi Cetacei
- Museo di Storia Naturale
- corso Venezia 55
- 20121 Milano - Italy
- fax: 39 2 76022287
- e-mail: msnm@imiucca.csi.unimi.it
-
- Michela Podesta'
- Museo di Storia Naturale
- corso Venezia 55
- 20121 Milano - Italy
- tel. +39 2 62085405
- fax +39 2 76022287
- e-mail msnm@imiucca.csi.unimi.it
- ** End of text from cdp:headlines **
-
- **********************************************************************
- This material came from PeaceNet, a non-profit progressive networking
- service. For more information, send a message to
- peacenet-info@igc.apc.org
- **********************************************************************
- Date: Fri, 04 Jul 1997 17:18:23 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FWD: Logging road legislation - urgent!
- Message-ID: <33BD92CF.2F56@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Vote on Wednesday for Porter/Kennedy Amendment
-
- The House has moved up the schedule for Interior
- Appropriations and will consider the bill beginning on Wednesday, July
- 9. The Porter/Kennedy timber roads amendment to the Interior bill is
- likely to be voted on that afternoon. We will keep you posted as the
- amendment moves closer to a vote.
-
- Help protect our National Forests.
- Help end corporate welfare for logging companies.
- Help put an end to construction of new logging roads.
-
- No New Logging Roads National Call-In Day Tuesday - July 8
- Please call your U.S. Representative on July 8 between 9:00am
- and 5:00pm Eastern Standard Time and urge them to support the
- Porter/Kennedy Amendment to the Fiscal Year '98 Interior
- Appropriations Bill. Please call them again on the day of the vote too!
- Capitol Hill Switchboard can be reached at
- 1-800-962-3524 or 202/224-3121
-
- Sign-On Letter Calls for End to New Logging Roads
- Enclosed for your review is an environmental sign-on letter that
- we hope to distribute to Congress on Tuesday morning. To sign-on
- your group, please contact Sean Cosgrove at 202/879-3193, fax
- 202/879-3189 or email wafcsean@igc.apc.org by close of business on
- Monday, July 7. Please include your name, organization, city and
- state. Also, please send a separate letter of support on your
- organization's letterhead to your state's congressional delegation.
- Thanks!
-
- July 8, 1997
-
- Dear Representatives:
-
- Please support the Porter/Kennedy amendment to the Interior
- Appropriations bill to end funding for new logging road construction
- and reconstruction on our National Forests.
-
- "Our No. 1 water quality problem in the National Forest System is
- roads," says USDA Undersecretary Jim Lyons.
-
- With 378,000 miles of roads in the National Forests already, new
- logging roads aren't necessary. New roads -- through construction or
- reconstruction -- will generate sediment, pollute waters, and damage
- fisheries.
-
- Their construction will also result in the logging of rare old growth
- forests, the fragmentation of wildlife habitat, and the loss of many
- wildlands that we should leave for the benefit and enjoyment of future
- generations.
-
- The timber industry will fight to keep this $90 million subsidy but
- please don't be fooled by their arguments:
-
- + Timber roads are not built to standards for recreational use,
- and Porter/Kennedy does not affect $26 million already in the
- budget for building new recreation roads.
-
- + "Reconstructing" a road causes just as much environmental
- damage as building a new one, and is no solution to
- maintenance needs.
-
- + The Porter/Kennedy amendment doesn't touch $85 million in
- the Forest Service budget for road maintenance.
-
- In fact, the Forest Service says that they have a backlog of $440
- million of road maintenance needs in the National Forests. What sense
- does it make to build new roads, when we can't afford to take care of
- the ones we have?
-
- The most immediate, direct step the Congress can take to move the
- Forest Service toward more balanced forest policies and greater fiscal
- and environmental accountability is to pass the Porter/Kennedy
- Amendment.
-
- Thanks for your consideration.
-
- Steve Holmer
- Campaign Coordinator
- Western Ancient Forest Campaign
- 1025 Vermont Ave, NW, 3rd Floor
- Washington, D.C. 20005
- 202/879-3188
- 202/879-3189 fax
- wafcdc@igc.apc.org
- Date: Fri, 04 Jul 1997 22:43:54 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (BE) EU Warns Belgium on Meat Companies
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970704224352.006e09e0@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------------
- 07/04/1997 13:42 EST
-
- EU Warns Belgium on Meat Companies
-
- BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- The European Union told Belgium Friday if it
- does not vigilantly prosecute two Belgian meat companies linked to the
- illegal import of British beef it will take legal action itself.
-
- ``We want member states to live up to their responsibility'' and enforce
- the EU ban on imports of British beef imposed in 1996 because of mad cow
- disease in Britain, said European Commission spokesman Klaus van der Pas.
-
- He said the EU may seek to pull the licenses of the two Belgian firms
- unless Belgium prosecutes them vigilantly.
-
- On Thursday, the EU said 1,600 tons of British beef was exported to the
- Netherlands, Egypt and Russia in recent weeks.
-
- The exports were discovered April 23 in the Netherlands where officials
- seized 700 tons and found 900 tons had been shipped to Egypt and Russia.
- Van der Pas said Friday the Egypt shipment was later returned.
-
- There was no indication the beef was from British cattle that had mad cow
- disease.
-
- Two Belgian exporters have been implicated in the exports, making use of
- what the EU has called Britain's ``manifestly inadequate'' export
- controls.
-
- On Thursday, the EU said it was up to individual governments to pursue
- importers of British beef. It took a tougher stance Friday saying it
- would take legal action if violators of the beef ban get away with it at
- home.
-
- Sources said that was a signal to EU capitals that the European
- Commisison wants them to implement EU law in a serious manner for the
- sake of retaining consumer confidence in beef.
-
- In 1996, the EU banned all British beef exports and ordered London to
- accelerate the eradication of mad cow disease through a massive slaughter
- program. Scientists believe there may be a link between that degenerative
- ailment and an equally fatal human brain ailment called Creutzfeldt-Jakob
- Disease.
-
- Date: Sat, 5 Jul 1997 11:17:49 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Eating less fat-especially less animal fat-saves lives
- Message-ID: <199707050317.LAA05563@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Saturday July 5 1997
- Men live longer on low-fat Mediterranean diet,
- 20-year study shows
- REUTER in London
-
- Eating less fat - especially less animal fat - really does save lives,
- European researchers said yesterday.
-
- A study comparing death rates among Finnish, Dutch and Italian men showed
- the healthier the diet, the lower the overall death rate.
-
- Patricia Huijbregts and colleagues at the National Institute of Public
- Health and the Environment in the Netherlands, along with colleagues in
- Finland and Italy, followed more than 3,000 men for 20 years.
-
- Deaths were directly related to eating habits.
-
- "This study shows that 20-year mortality is lowest in men with the
- healthiest diet according to World Health Organisation recommendations,"
- they wrote in a report in the British Medical Journal.
-
- WHO guidelines say no more than 30 per cent of calories should come from fat
- and recommend a daily limit of 300 milligrams of cholesterol.
-
- "In Finland and the Netherlands, the intake of saturated fatty acids
- and cholesterol was high and the intake of alcohol was low," they wrote.
- "In Italy, the opposite was observed."
-
- High-fat diets are strongly linked with higher rates of cancer and
- heart disease. Ms Huijbregts' group found this was indeed the case.
-
- "Mortality was highest in eastern Finland and lowest in Montegiorgio
- [Italy].
- "The group with the highest healthy diet indicator had an 18 per cent lower
- risk from cardiovascular disease than the group with the lowest healthy
- diet indicator," they wrote.
-
- "Risk of death from cancer was 15 per cent lower in the highest group."
-
- The study accounted for smoking, age and intake of alcohol.
-
- Other researchers have proposed that the so-called Mediterranean diet,
- which has a high intake of fruits, vegetables and olive oil, is healthier
- than the northern European diet where fats come mostly from meat and cheese.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 5 Jul 1997 11:17:54 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Doggone blow for Basinger
- Message-ID: <199707050317.LAA06917@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Saturday July 5 1997
- Doggone blow for Basinger
- A British-owned laboratory refused to give actress and animal-rights
- activist Kim Basinger 36 beagles spared from drug research that would have
- involved breaking their legs.
-
- Basinger showed up at the East Millstone, New Jersey, offices of Huntingdon
- Life Sciences to claim the dogs but went away empty-handed.
-
- The company said the dogs were bred for research and were not pets.
-
- Yamanouchi, the Japanese pharmaceuticals company that commissioned the
- tests on a medicine for osteoporosis, dropped its request after Basinger
- stirred up international publicity by offering to adopt the beagles.
-
- Date: Sat, 5 Jul 1997 11:18:00 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: DNA Analysis Proves South Korea Not Illegal Whale-Meat
- Importer
- Message-ID: <199707050318.LAA07128@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Korea Herald
- 07-05-97 : DNA Analysis Proves South Korea Not Illegal Whale-Meat Importer
-
- Debunking suspicions by some critics that Korea, a member of the
- International Whaling Commission (IWC) which bans whaling, may be importing
- illegal whale meat, recent tests by a U.S. lab indicated the opposite.
-
- The recent genetic analysis of whale meat circulating in Korea proved
- that the specimens tested were whales which habitat local, Korean waters
- and not international seas, according to an Environment Ministry official.
- ``The genetic analysis by a U.S. science laboratory showed that all
- specimens of domestic whale meat belonged to species living in the seas off
- Korea,'' the official said yesterday.
-
- Only whales caught by Korean fisherman in nets by accident, are allowed
- for consumption, the ministry said. On May 9, the ministry asked a U.S.
- laboratory to conduct the genetic analysis of domestic whale meat, to prove
- that South Korea does not illegally import the banned mammal.
-
- Eighteen specimens of whale meat circulating in Korea, were taken and
- analyzed at the Southwest Fisheries Science Center in the United States, the
- ministry said. ``The U.S. center carried out the DNA (Deoxyribo Nucleic
- Acid) analysis of the whale-meat samples to find out the species and the
- habitats,'' Yu Ho, a ministry official said.
-
- DNA carries genetic information unique to each species. Yu said that
- the DNA analysis revealed the whale specimens' genetic types, which
- indicated their species and, more importantly, what seas they roamed in.
- ``The U.S. center informed us of the DNA analysis results last month. None
- of the domestic whale meat samples came from species which lived in foreign
- habitats,'' she said.
-
- The whale meat tested was found in domestic markets in Pusan, Ulsan and
- Pohang, caught unexpectedly in trawling nets. If fishing trawlers catch the
- endangered whales by accident, they are obliged to undergo a through
- inspection by authorities before selling them, the ministry said. The exact
- amount of whale meat circulating is hard estimate, and thought to be
- negligible, due to the nation's strict ban on whaling.
-
- Korea joined the IWC in December, 1978. The IWC has imposed a
- full-fledged ban on industrial whaling since 1986. It is the second time
- Korea has allowed DNA analyses of domestic whale meat since 1994, when an
- international environmental group unofficially conducted tests.
-
- In the 1994 tests, genetic analyses on 47 specimens of whale meat, indicated
- six samples turned out to be imported from abroad, the ministry said.
-
- Date: Sat, 5 Jul 1997 11:18:06 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TH) Rats have edge in battle for Bangkok
- Message-ID: <199707050318.LAA07362@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Saturday July 5 1997
- Rats have edge in battle for Bangkok
- BEN BARBER in Bangkok
-
- War has been declared on an underground army that outnumbers Bangkok's
- human inhabitants 15 to one.
-
- Studies reveal city drains and garbage help sustain an estimated 234
- million rats that pose a significant threat to health.
- Bangkok's rats are the variety whose fleas can carry bubonic plague or the
- "black death". The authorities fear the rodents could become the source of
- a pneumonic epidemic like the 1994 outbreak in India.
-
- Bangkok Governor Bhichit Rattakul this year launched a cleanup campaign
- to help beautify a city notorious for dust, rotting garbage and traffic
- pollution.
-
- Health officers say the campaign aims to extend life spans which are
- lower than in the provinces.
-
- A Health Sciences Research Institute study estimated 160 million rats
- lurk in the slum areas of Klong Toey and Bang Khen.
-
- Staff of a rat-plagued city hospital described how the animals fed on the
- plaster cast of a woman with a broken leg.
-
- Patients complained they could not sleep because of the noise rats made
- chewing electrical wires.
-
- Hospital staff have been unable to reduce the number of rats, which
- they suspect originate from a nearby slum.
-
- Health officers say Bangkok's water-treatment system is equal to world
- standards, but they worry about the threat posed by an unusually large rat
- population.
- "There is only a minute possibility, but we don't want a repeat of the black
- death," an official said. "We also want to prevent other diseases carried
- by rats."
-
-
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