Sunday 28 September 2014

Mind War in the UK


"The root cause of this terrorist threat is a poisonous ideology of Islamist extremism. This is nothing to do with Islam, which is a peaceful religion which inspires countless acts of generosity every day. Islamist extremism on the other hand believes in using the most brutal forms of terrorism to force people to accept a warped world view and to live in a quasi-mediaeval state.

To defeat ISIL – and organisations like it - we must defeat this ideology in all its forms.

As evidence emerges about the backgrounds of those convicted of terrorist offences, it is clear that many of them were initially influenced by preachers who claim not to encourage violence, but whose world view can be used as a justification for it. We know this world view.

The peddling of lies: that 9/11 was a Jewish plot or that the 7/7 London attacks were staged. The idea that Muslims are persecuted all over the world as a deliberate act of Western policy. The concept of an inevitable clash of civilisations.

We must be clear: to defeat the ideology of extremism we need to deal with all forms of extremism – not just violent extremism."







Madam President, this year we face extraordinary tests of our values and our resolve. In responding to the aggression against one of our member states, Ukraine; in seeking peace in the Middle East; in dealing with the terrifying spread of the Ebola virus in West Africa.

And in overcoming what I want to focus on today – which is the mortal threat we all face from the rise of ISIL (Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant) in Syria and Iraq.

Deir al-Zor is a province in Eastern Syria. Home to the al-Sheitaat tribe, it was captured by ISIL last month. 700 tribesmen were executed, many were beheaded.

The vast majority were civilians - Muslims - who refused to take an oath of allegiance to ISIL’s sick extremist world view – and who paid for this with their lives.

They are not alone.

Across Syria and Northern Iraq thousands have suffered the same fate. Muslims – both Sunni and Shia. Christians, Yazidis, people of every faith and none. ISIL is not a problem restricted to just one region.

It has murderous plans to expand its borders well beyond Iraq and Syria, and to carry out terrorist atrocities right across the world.

It is recruiting new fighters from all over the world. 500 have gone there from my country Britain, and one of them almost certainly brutally murdered two American journalists and a British aid worker.

This is a problem that affects us all. And we must tackle it together.

Now there is not one person in this hall who will view this challenge without reference to the past. Whether in Iraq. Whether in Afghanistan.

Now of course it is absolutely right that we should learn the lessons of the past, especially of what happened in Iraq a decade ago.

But we have to learn the right lessons. Yes to careful preparation; no to rushing to join a conflict without a clear plan. But we must not be so frozen with fear that we don’t do anything at all.

Isolation and withdrawing from a problem like ISIL will only make matters worse. We must not allow past mistakes to become an excuse for indifference or inaction.

The right lesson is that we should act – but act differently. We should be:

comprehensive – defeating the ideology of extremism that is the root cause of this terrorism - so that we win the battle of ideas, not just the battle of military might
intelligent – supporting representative and accountable governments and working with them at their requests, not going in over their heads
inclusive – working with partners in the region who are prepared to be part of the solution, potentially including Iran.
uncompromising – using all the means at our disposal – including military force – to hunt down these extremists
Let me take each of these in turn.

Defeating the ideology of extremism
The root cause of this terrorist threat is a poisonous ideology of Islamist extremism. This is nothing to do with Islam, which is a peaceful religion which inspires countless acts of generosity every day. Islamist extremism on the other hand believes in using the most brutal forms of terrorism to force people to accept a warped world view and to live in a quasi-mediaeval state.

To defeat ISIL – and organisations like it - we must defeat this ideology in all its forms.

As evidence emerges about the backgrounds of those convicted of terrorist offences, it is clear that many of them were initially influenced by preachers who claim not to encourage violence, but whose world view can be used as a justification for it. We know this world view.

The peddling of lies: that 9/11 was a Jewish plot or that the 7/7 London attacks were staged. The idea that Muslims are persecuted all over the world as a deliberate act of Western policy. The concept of an inevitable clash of civilisations.

We must be clear: to defeat the ideology of extremism we need to deal with all forms of extremism – not just violent extremism.

For governments, there are some obvious ways we can do this. We must ban preachers of hate from coming to our countries. We must proscribe organisations that incite terrorism against people at home and abroad. We must work together to take down illegal online material like the recent videos of ISIL murdering hostages. And we must stop the so called non-violent extremists from inciting hatred and intolerance in our schools, our universities and yes, even our prisons.

Of course there are some who will argue that this is not compatible with free speech and intellectual inquiry.

But I say: would we sit back and allow right-wing extremists, Nazis or Klu Klux Klansmen to recruit on our university campuses? No.

So we shouldn’t stand by and just allow any form of non-violent extremism. We need to argue that prophecies of a global war of religion pitting Muslims against the rest of the world. These things are nonsense. We need Muslims and their governments around the world to reclaim their religion from these sick terrorists as so many are doing and quite rightly doing today. We all need to help them with programmes that channel young people away from these poisonous ideologues. And we need the strongest possible international focus on tackling this ideology - which is why here at the United Nations, the United Kingdom is calling for a new Special Representative on extremism.

Working with representative and accountable governments
But fighting extremism will never be enough.

Communism wasn’t defeated simply by pointing out its flaws – but by showing that the alternative of economic freedoms, democracy and the rule of law, these things could build a better society and a better world. Young people need to see the power of a different, better, more open, more democratic path. The twentieth century taught us the vital role of representative and accountable governments in offering their people opportunity, hope and dignity.

Of course we should not be naive: not every country can move at the same speed or even reach the same destination. And we should respect different cultures and traditions and histories. But, let’s be clear: the failure to meet people’s aspirations can create a breeding ground where extremist and even terrorist insurgency can take root.

Governments that only govern for some of their people cause deep resentment. In Iraq the failure of the al-Maliki government to represent all of the people has driven some of them into the arms of the extremists. Too often people have been faced with a false choice between an autocratic and unrepresentative government on the one hand - or a brutal insurgency, with religion misused as its rallying call on the other. To combat this we must support the building blocks of free and open societies.

In Iraq this means supporting the creation of a new and genuinely inclusive government capable of uniting all Iraqis – Sunni, Shia and Kurds, Christians and others.

In Syria, it must mean a political transition and an end to Assad’s brutality.

Now I know there are some who think that we should do a deal with Assad in order to defeat ISIL.

But I think this view is dangerously misguided. Our enemies’ enemy is not our friend. It is another enemy. Doing a deal with Assad will not defeat ISIL - because the bias and the brutality of the Assad regime was and is one of the most powerful recruiting tools for the extremists. Syria needs what Iraq needs: an inclusive, representative, democratic government that can look after the interests of all its people.

So to those who have backed Assad or have stood on the sidelines, I would say this: we are ready to join with you in a new political effort to secure a representative and accountable government in Damascus that can take the fight to ISIL. But it is simply not credible for Assad to lead such a government. Although we are prepared to look at every practical option to find a way forward.

Taking an inclusive approach
Third, we must be inclusive, engaging the widest possible coalition of countries in this international effort. ISIL is a threat to us all. But the greatest threat is to the region. It is very welcome that a number of Arab countries have already taken part in the action to degrade ISIL. They have shown courage and leadership.

Iran should also be given the chance to show it can be part of the solution, not part of the problem. Earlier today I met with President Rouhani. We have severe disagreements. Iran’s support for terrorist organisations, its nuclear programme, its treatment of its people. All these need to change.

But Iran’s leaders could help in defeating the threat from ISIL. They could help secure a more stable, inclusive Iraq; and a more stable and inclusive Syria. And if they are prepared to do this, then we should welcome their engagement.

Taking an uncompromising approach
Finally, when the safety and security of our people is at stake, we must be uncompromising in our response. That starts at home.

For our part, in the United Kingdom, we are introducing new powers.

To strengthen our ability to seize passports and stop suspects travelling.

To allow us to strip British identity from dual nationals and temporarily prevent some British nationals getting back into our country.

To ensure that airlines comply with our no fly lists and security screening requirements.

And to enable our police and our security services to apply for stronger locational constraints on those in the UK who pose a risk.

Here at the United Nations we have led a Security Council Resolution to disrupt the flows of finance to ISIL - to sanction those who are seeking to recruit to ISIL and to encourage countries to do all they can to prevent foreign fighters joining the extremist cause.

But what about the role of our military?

I don’t believe this threat of Islamist extremism will best be solved by Western ground troops directly trying to pacify or reconstruct Middle Eastern or African countries. But pursing an intelligent and comprehensive approach should include a place for our military.

Our military can support the enormous humanitarian efforts that are necessary - as our Royal Air Force did helping the millions of people who have fled from ISIL. And we should – together – do more to build the capability of the legitimate authorities fighting the extremists.

This can mean training, equipping and advising. Providing technology and the other assets necessary for success. Whether it is supporting action against Boko Haram in Nigeria; against Al-Shabaab in Somalia; against Ansar Al-Sharia in Libya or against Al Qaeda in Yemen - it is right to help those on the frontline who are fighting for their societies and their countries and their freedom.

Along with our European partners we have already been supplying equipment directly to Kurdish forces. We are strengthening the resilience of military forces in neighbouring Lebanon and Jordan. And British Tornado and surveillance aircraft have already been helping with intelligence gathering and logistics to help support those taking on ISIL in Iraq.

We now have a substantial international coalition in place, including Arab nations, committed to confronting and defeating ISIL. We have a comprehensive strategy to do that – with the political, diplomatic, humanitarian and military components that it needs to succeed over time.

The UN Security Council has now received a clear request from the Iraqi government to support it in its military action against ISIL. So we have a clear basis in international law for action. And we have a need to act in our own national interest to protect our people and our society.

So it is right that Britain should now move to a new phase of action. I am therefore recalling the British Parliament on Friday to secure approval for the United Kingdom to take part in international air strikes against ISIL in Iraq.

My message today is simple. We are facing an evil against which the whole of the world should unite. And, as ever in the cause of freedom, democracy and justice, Britain will play its part.

The Throwdown Switch : The Way That You Kill Hitler

Now you don't see it...

"We switched the dental records on the way out of the bunker, prior to the final breakout."

Hugo Blaschke
Hitler's Personal Dentist

...and now you do.

James Brady was NOT shot with a .38 - his whole skull would be in pieces.

Certainly if it was loaded with illegal "devastator" bullets which explode when they hit things

He was shot with a .22 - a pop-gun by comparison.

Here we see James Brady and James Brady's head injury, right next to the gun that didn't cause them, along with the Secret Service agent that just put it there...

The DC policeman with the long coat is the one who picked up the .22 and took it away from Hinkley.








Flatterers



Machiavelli's The Prince (1513)

Chapter XXIII: How Flatterers should be Avoided

I do not wish to leave out an important branch of this subject, for it is a danger from which princes are with difficulty preserved, unless they are very careful and discriminating. It is that of flatterers, of whom courts are full, because men are so self-complacent in their own affairs, and in a way so deceived in them, that they are preserved with difficulty from this pest, and if they wish to defend themselves they run the danger of falling into contempt. Because there is no other way of guarding oneself from flatterers except letting men understand that to tell you the truth does not offend you; but when every one may tell you the truth, respect for you abates.

Therefore a wise prince ought to hold a third course by choosing the wise men in his state, and giving to them only the liberty of speaking the truth to him, and then only of those things of which he inquires, and of none others; but he ought to question them upon everything, and listen to their opinions, and afterwards form his own conclusions. With these councillors, separately and collectively, he ought to carry himself in such a way that each of them should know that, the more freely he shall speak, the more he shall be preferred; outside of these, he should listen to no one, pursue the thing resolved on, and be steadfast in his resolutions. He who does otherwise is either overthrown by flatterers, or is so often changed by varying opinions that he falls into contempt.

I wish on this subject to adduce a modern example. Fra Luca, the man of affairs to Maximilian,[*] the present emperor, speaking of his majesty, said: He consulted with no one, yet never got his own way in anything. This arose because of his following a practice the opposite to the above; for the emperor is a secretive man--he does not communicate his designs to any one, nor does he receive opinions on them. But as in carrying them into effect they become revealed and known, they are at once obstructed by those men whom he has around him, and he, being pliant, is diverted from them. Hence it follows that those things he does one day he undoes the next, and no one ever understands what he wishes or intends to do, and no one can rely on his resolutions.

[*] Maximilian I, born in 1459, died 1519, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. He married, first, Mary, daughter of Charles the Bold; after her death, Bianca Sforza; and thus became involved in Italian politics.

A prince, therefore, ought always to take counsel, but only when he wishes and not when others wish; he ought rather to discourage every one from offering advice unless he asks it; but, however, he ought to be a constant inquirer, and afterwards a patient listener concerning the things of which he inquired; also, on learning that nay one, on any consideration, has not told him the truth, he should let his anger be felt.

And if there are some who think that a prince who conveys an impression of his wisdom is not so through his own ability, but through the good advisers that he has around him, beyond doubt they are deceived, because this is an axiom which never fails: that a prince who is not wise himself will never take good advice, unless by chance he has yielded his affairs entirely to one person who happens to be a very prudent man. In this case indeed he may be well governed, but it would not be for long, because such a governor would in a short time take away his state from him.

But if a prince who is not inexperienced should take counsel from more than one he will never get united counsels, nor will he know how to unite them. Each of the counsellors will think of his own interests, and the prince will not know how to control them or to see through them. And they are not to found otherwise, because men will always prove untrue to you unless they are kept honest by constraint. Therefore it must be inferred that good counsels, whencesoever they come, are born of the wisdom of the prince, and not the wisdom of the prince from good counsels.

HIV in Libya

"HIV is the first disease in history where if you're immune to it, you're gonna die from it"

- Dr Robert Wilner


Correspondence
Nature 448, 992 (30 August 2007) | doi:10.1038/448992a
Published online 29 August 2007

Libya should stop denying scientific evidence on HIV

Vittorio Colizzi1, Tulio de Oliveira2 & Richard J. Roberts3
  1. University of Rome Tor Vergata, Via della Ricerca Scientifica, 00133 Rome, Italy
  2. South African National Bioinformatics Institute, University of Western Cape, Private Bag X17, Bellville 7535, South Africa
  3. New England Biolabs, 240 County Road, Ipswich, Massachusetts 01938-2723, USA

Sir

We welcome Libya's recent decision to commute to life imprisonment the death sentences of five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian medic. All six were imprisoned for eight years on false charges of deliberately infecting children with HIV in the hospital where they worked. We also applaud the subsequent decision by Bulgaria's president to pardon and release the six immediately upon their extradition to Sofia.
We cannot accept, however, the Libyan government's continued denial of the scientific evidence in this case. That denial constitutes a barrier to establishing normal relations with the international medical and scientific community, from which assistance is urgently needed to upgrade Libya's health-care system.
The 17 July announcement that Libya's Higher Judicial Council had commuted the death sentence to life imprisonment should have been accompanied by an explicit acknowledgement that the real cause of the outbreak was an accident stemming from insufficient infection controls and hospital safety precautions.
Indeed, the statements from Libya's prime minister and foreign minister, condemning the recent pardon, reiterating the original conspiracy charges and calling for the health workers to be re-imprisoned, shows that the final judicial and political decision-making process had little to do with the accumulated scientific evidence.
Despite pleas from more than 100 Nobel laureates (R. J. Roberts et al.Nature 444, 146; doi:10.1038/444146a 2006), the judiciary refused to allow independent scientific evidence to be heard during the trial.
In particular, the judiciary failed to take into account convincing findings that the HIV infection was present in the hospital before the arrival of the health-care workers (T. de Oliveira et alNature 444, 836–837; 2006). Similarly ignored was the concurrent outbreak of hepatitis C among the same population of children — a strong signal that they were picking up other blood-borne infections from the hospital.
Opportunities for contamination of medical materials are frequent in many hospitals in developing countries, and there is an urgent need to redress this situation by improving health-care policies and practices. The Libyan government wants to upgrade the standards of hygiene and care in its hospitals. With the cooperation of the international scientific and medical community, it could make Libyan hospitals a model for health care in the region and in the African continent.
Removing the obstacle of Libya's intransigence on the science in this case is essential to allow such cooperation to move forward. We call on the Libyan authorities to put this affair behind them, and to exonerate the six health-care workers.
This letter was also signed by:
Massimo Amicosante University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy
Thomas Lehner Guy's Hospital, London, UK
Luc Montagnier World AIDS Foundation for Research and Prevention, Paris, France
David Pauza University of Maryland, Baltimore, USA
Luc Perrin University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland
Giovanni Rezza Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy




British Medical Journal
Feb 3, 2001; 322(7281): 260.
PMCID: PMC1119524

Doctors face murder charges in Libya
Carl Kovac and Radko Khandjiev

Sixteen doctors, nurses, and managers at the Al-Fateh Hospital in Benghazi, Libya, are standing trial in Tripoli. All are charged with subverting the country's healthcare system, and seven are charged with murder. The trial, which has been adjourned several times, is scheduled to resume next week.

According to an 11 count indictment issued by the People's Claim Bureau, seven of the defendants are charged with murdering 393 children at the Al-Fateh hospital in 1998 by injecting them with HIV. Twenty three of the children had died by 30 October 1999, the indictment says.

The seven accused of murder—a Bulgarian doctor, five Bulgarian nurses, and a Palestinian doctor, all working under contract at the hospital—face the death penalty if convicted.

The Palestinian doctor and three of the nurses are also accused of having sexual relations “outside marriage.” One of the nurses is also charged with providing the Palestinian doctor with liquor, which “made him dependent and put him under her will in order to continue the crime.” The Bulgarian doctor and four of the nurses are also accused of drinking alcohol in violation of Libyan law.

The indictment also charges the Palestinian doctor and one of the nurses with violating Libya's foreign exchange laws through illegal transactions on the black market and illegal exports and imports.

Nine Libyans, including the director of the Al-Fateh Hospital and the undersecretary of Benghazi's Department of Health, are charged with exposing 19 of the mothers of the infected children to HIV. They “hid the fact that the children were already infected” and failed to take prophylactic measures to protect the mothers.

“In their capacity as government employees, they have committed malpractice to achieve illegal material benefit for themselves by concealing the results of laboratory analyses of the infected children,” the indictment says. The hospital director and the health department's undersecretary are specifically charged with having “abused their positions for personal benefit.”

Ironically, according to a UNAIDS report, Libya has not supplied any information on AIDS cases in that country for 1998-2000. Suleiman Al-Gamary, the former head of Libya's health service, has reportedly expressed concern over the deterioration of the country's health services and the shortage of medicines and hospital supplies as a result of the former UN sanctions against Libya.

According to Libyan authorities, the accused staff have been in custody since their arrest on 9 February 1999 after an investigation.


The LIDA Machine




Associated Press (Exact date not shown on copy but tests took place 1982/83) Loma Linda (Veterans Hospital research unit)
San Bernardino County


An old medical, Russian-made device that transmits pulses of 40 MHz radio signal at pulse rates designed to match relaxed and sleeping states originally.

The machine, known as the LIDA, is on loan to the Jerry L. Pettis Memorial Veterans Hospital through a medical exchangeprogram between the Soviet Union and the United States.

Hospital researchers have found in changes behavior in animals.

"It looks as though instead of taking a valium when you want to relax yourself it would be possible to achieve a similar result, probably in a safer way, by the use of a radio field that will relax you" said Dr. Ross Adey, chief of research at the hospital.  [Dr. Adey is now deceased.]

[Missing one line on the photocopy] ... manual shows it being used on a human in a clinical setting, Adey said. The manual says it is a "distant pulse treating apparatus" for psychological problems, including sleeplessness, hyper-tension and neurotic disturbances.

The device has not been approved for use with humans in this country, although the Russians have done so since at least 1960, Adey Said.

Low frequency radio waves simulate the brain's own electromagnetic current and produce a trance-like state.

Adey said he put a cat in a box and turned on the LIDA.

"Within a matter of two or three minutes it is sitting there very quietly ... it stays almost as though it were transfixed" he said.

Tho hospital's experiment with the machine has been underway for three months and should be completed within a year, Adey said.

Eleanor White's comments (Dr. Byrd's statement follows):

1.  Heavy "fatigue attacks" are a very common experience among
involuntary neuro-electromagnetic experimentees.  The LIDA device could, right out of the box, be used as a fatigue attack weapon,  FROM HIDING, thru non- or semi-conductive walls.

2.  If the LIDA machine is tuned for tranquilizing effect, then 
it might also be tuned for "force awake" and other effects too.
This device is an electronic harassment weapon, AS IS.  A TV
documentary stated the Russian medical establishment considers
this 1950s device obsolete.  (Wonder what has taken it's place?)

Below is a statement from Dr. Eldon Byrd, U.S. psychotronic researcher who funded Dr. Adey's work with the LIDA machine:

"The LIDA machine was made in the 1950's by the Soviets.  The CIA purchased one through a Canadian front for Dr. Ross Adey, but didn't give him any funds to evaluate it.

"I provided those funds from my project in 1981, and he determined that the LIDA would put rabbits into a stupor at a distance and make cats go into REM.

"The Soviets included a picture with the device that showed an
entire auditorium full of people asleep with the LIDA on the
podium.  The LIDA put out an electric field, a magnetic field,
light, heat, and sound (of course light and heat are electromagnetic waves, but at a much higher frequency than the low frequencies of the electric and magnetic fields mentioned above).

"The purported purpose of the LIDA was for medical treatments;
however, the North Koreans used it as a brain washing device
during the Korean War.  The big question is:  what did they do
with the technology?  It could have been improved and/or made
smaller.  It is unlikely that they abandoned something that
worked.

"Direct communication with Ross Adey:  While he was testing the
LIDA 4, an electrician was walking by and asked him where he got
the "North Korean brain washing machine".  Ross told him that is
was a Russian medical device.

"The guy said he had been brain-washed by a device like that when
he was in a POW camp. They placed the vertical plates alongside
his head and read questions and answers to him.  He said he felt
like he was in a dream.  Later when the Red Cross came and asked
questions, he responded with what had been read to him while under the influence of the device.  He said he seemed to have no control over the answers.

"The LIDA is PATENTED IN THE US.  Why?  They are not sold in the US--the only one I know that exists is the one that was at Loma Linda Medical Center where Adey used to work.  Eldon"

Involuntary neuro-experimentation activist Cheryl Welsh, Davis CA, sent in this clipping from an article by Dr. Ross Adey but without complete bibliographic references:

"Soviet investigators have also developed a therapeutic device
utilizing low frequency square wave modulation of a radiofrequency field.  This instrument known as the Lida was developed by L.Rabichev and his colleagues in Soviet Armenia, and is designed  for "the treatment of neuropsychic and somatic disorders, such as neuroses, psychoses, insomnia, hypertension, stammering, bronchia asthma, and asthenic and reactive disturbances".

It is covered by U.S. Patent # 3,773,049.  In addition to the pulsed RF field, the device also delivers pulsed light, pulsed sound, and pulsed heat.  Each stimulus train can be independently adjusted in intensity and frequency.

The radiofrequency field has a nominal carrier frequency of 40 MHz and a maximum output of approximately 40 Watts.  The E- field is applied to the patient on the sides of the neck through two disc electrodes approximately 10 cm in diameter.  The electrodes are located at a distance of 2-4 cm from the skin.

[Eleanor White's comment:  The fact that Dr. Ross Adey mentioned
an "audience" being put to sleep by the LIDA suggests that the
"E-field" electrodes may not play an essential role.  The radio
signal appears to be the primary cause of the sleep/trance effect.]

Optimal repetition frequencies are said to lie in the range from 40
to 80 pulses per minute.  Pulse duration is typically 0.2 sec.  In
an 8 year trial period, the instrument was tested on 740 patients,
including adults and children.  Postivive therapeutic effects were
claimed in more..."


George Robertson


Dunblane Secret Documents Contain Letters by Tory and Labour MinistersNeil Mackay - The Sunday Herald, News, 2 March 2003

LETTERS between Labour and Tory ministers and correspondence relating to Thomas Hamilton's alleged involvement with Freemasonry are part of a batch of more than 100 documents about the Dunblane mass murder which have been sealed from public sight for 100 years.

The documents include a letter connected to Hamilton, which was sent by George Robertson, currently head of Nato, to Michael Forsyth, who was then Secretary of State for Scotland.

Until now it was thought that a 100-year public secrecy order had only been placed on one police report into Hamilton which allegedly named high-profile politicians and legal figures. However, a Sunday Herald investigation has uncovered that 106 documents, which were submitted to the Dunblane inquiry in 1996, were also placed under the 100-year rule.

The Scottish Executive has claimed the 100-year secrecy order was placed on the Central Police report, which was drafted in 1991 five years before the murders, to protect the identities of children named in the report. Hamilton had allegedly abused a number of children prior to his 1996 gun attack on Dunblane primary school in which 16 primary one children and a teacher died before Hamilton turned his gun on himself.

However, only a handful of the documents, which the Sunday Herald has discovered to be also subject to the 100-year rule, relate to children or name alleged abuse victims.

The most intriguing document is listed as: 'Copy of letter from Thomas Hamilton to Dunblane parents regarding boys' club, and flyer advertising Dunblane Boys' Sports Club. Both sent to Rt Hon Michael Forsyth, MP, Secretary of State for Scotland, by George Robertson MP.' Also closed under the 100-year rule is a 'submission to Lord James Douglas Hamilton, MP, Minister of State at the Scottish Office, concerning government evidence to the Inquiry'.

Another document relates to correspondence between the clerk of the Dunblane inquiry, which was presided over by Lord Cullen, and a member of the public regarding 'possible affiliations of Thomas Hamilton with Freemasonry ... and copy letters from Thomas Hamilton'.

SNP deputy justice minister, Michael Matheson, said: 'The explanation to date about the 100 -year rule was that it was put in place to protect the interests of children named in the Central Police report. How can that explanation stand when children aren't named? The 100-year rule needs to be re-examined with respect to all documents.'

Matheson has written to the Lord Advocate, Colin Boyd, asking why the 100-year rule applies and how it can be revoked. He has so far had no response. He also asked First Minister Jack McConnell to explain the reasons for the 100-year order but received 'no substantial answer'. Matheson is to write to Colin Boyd a second time, in the light of the discovery that more than 100 other documents are also sealed, asking him to account for the decision.

A spokeswoman for the Crown Office said: 'In consultation with the Crown Office and the Scottish Office, Lord Cullen agreed that in line with the age of some of the individuals involved and named in the inquiry, the closure period would be 100 years. The Lord Advocate is considering issuing a redacted copy of the productions, which would blank out identifying details of children and their families. A decision on this has yet to be made.'

Other sealed key reports on Dunblane include: 


· A 'comparative analysis of Thomas Hamilton' by Central Scotland Police 


· Information about Hamilton's 'use and possession of firearms' 


· Pathology reports, Hamilton's autopsy report, and analysis by Glasgow University's forensic science lab on blood, urine and liver samples from Hamilton's body 


· Details on firearms licensing policies 


· A review by Alfred Vannet, regional procurator fiscal of Grampian, Highland and Islands, of 'reports and information in respect of Thomas Hamilton submitted to the procurator fiscals of Dumbarton and Stirling by Strathclyde Police and Central Police' 


· A psychological report on Hamilton 


· Guidance from the British Medical Association on granting firearms licences 


· 'Transcript of and correspondence relating to answering-machine tape which accidentally recorded conversation between police officers at the scene of the Dunblane incident' 


· Correspondence and witness statements 'relating to allegations of sexual abuse made against Hamilton' 


See Blair's Protection of Elite Paedophile Rings Spells the End For His Career
www.propagandamatrix.com/blair_protection.html 





Robertson considers action over web allegation 

ANDREW DENHOLM 
adenholm@scotsman.com 



GEORGE Robertson, the NATO secretary general, is considering legal action against the owners of the Sunday Herald, over internet allegations about his connection to Thomas Hamilton, the Dunblane killer. 

The move by Lord Robertson, which could force Scottish Media Group to pay out hundreds of thousands of pounds in compensation, follows claims posted on the newspaper’s discussion page by a member of the public. 

Last night, lawyers warned that the scale of the payout could even force the Sunday Herald out of business, given worldwide awareness of the Dunblane massacre. 

There was also concern that the case could have serious implications for anyone who operates a website encouraging views from members of the public. 

Andrew Jaspan, the editor of the Glasgow-based Sunday Herald, admitted the website was not "policed", although he insisted the offending material had been removed half an hour after the paper was contacted by Lord Robertson’s representatives. 

However, last night, a legal source said the information posted on the Sunday Herald forum had been there for four weeks and could have badly damaged Lord Robertson’s reputation. 

He said: "We are talking about a well-known public figure on the international stage being linked through these allegations to an atrocity which is known throughout the world. 

"We are talking about hundreds of thousands of pounds in compensation and even an amount which could close the newspaper. 

"Authors already have a responsibility not to publish defamatory statements. If they do, and they do put them on the web, then there is no reason why they shouldn’t be liable worldwide." 

Another Scottish legal expert said online defamation typified by the case involving Lord Robertson was an area of increasing concern for businesses. 

Traditionally, defamation has been considered a national matter, with little scope for conflict between laws of different countries, but the internet has muddied the waters by emphasising the cross-border access to websites which is possible for users. 

Gillian Davies, a solicitor with Edinburgh-based Shepherd & Wedderburn, who specialise in intellectual property and information technology law, said: "Documents published and uploaded in one country can be viewed and downloaded all over the world, exposing newspapers and other publishers to the libel laws of potentially any nation which provides internet access to its citizens. 

"The lack of a uniform approach at an international level to such issues prevents any kind of legal certainty." 

Internet speculation about Lord Robertson grew following the revelation that 106 documents were closed to the public after the inquiry into the shootings at Dunblane Primary School in 1996. 

Lord Robertson told Lord Cullen’s public inquiry he became increasingly concerned about Hamilton’s militaristic camps after his own son attended Dunblane Rovers, run by Hamilton in 1983. After speaking of his fears to Michael Forsyth, then a newly elected MP for Stirling, Lord Robertson kept him informed of publicity relating to Hamilton’s clubs. 

Yesterday, the Mail on Sunday claimed the letters between the two politicians drew a detailed picture of Hamilton’s perverted behaviour towards young boys in his care as well as his firearms obsession. 

The paper states that letters from Mr Forsyth "campaigned on behalf" of Hamilton from 1983 onwards, but that he also passed to police parental concerns about Hamilton’s personality. After receiving letters from Hamilton complaining about a police investigation into his 1988 summer camp, Mr Forsyth raised the issue with Central Scotland Police. 

A year later, Hamilton met the force’s deputy chief constable and, the Mail says, shortly afterwards the killer wrote to Mr Forsyth "thanking him for his assistance".

THE PLAGUE THAT NEVER WAS By Neville Hodgkinson, Tanzania The SundayTimes (London) 3 October 1993


"The world has been brainwashed about AIDS. 
It has become a disease in itself, without the necessity of having sick people any more. 
You don't need AIDS patients to have an AIDS epidemic nowadays, because what is wrong doesn't need to be proved. 
Nobody checks; AIDS exists by itself. 
We came here to help orphans of AIDS. 
Now we are facing a situation where there are no orphans and no AIDS."

THE PLAGUE THAT NEVER WAS
By Neville Hodgkinson, Tanzania
The Sunday Times (London) 3 October 1993



Philippe and Evelyne Krynen had come to Africa with a quest: their mission was to help children in the direst need. After being told they could have no children of their own, the French charity workers had determined they would dedicate the rest of their lives to Third World orphans.
In January 1989 they found the ideal opportunity. A three-day journey through Tanzania by bus, train and boat took the couple to the remote Kagera province, a pocket of land west of Lake Victoria and bordering Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi, where Africa's first cases of AIDS had been diagnosed as far back as 1983.

Now the region was an epicentre of the disease, according to a local Lutheran bishop who took them on a tour of the worst-hit places. Whole villages were being destroyed, people were dying continuously in and around the main township of Bukoba, and HIV testing suggested that up to half the sexually active population was infected.

Philippe, 50, a former pilot, and Evelyne, 42, a teacher, prepared an illustrated report on their findings, Voyage des Krynen en Tanzanie, which they sent back to France. It was to prove a catalyst for world interest in the social impact of the pandemic of AIDS in the continent.
Their journal presented a dramatic picture: children alone in houses emptied of adults, or abandoned into the care of grandparents; a football team destroyed by the disease; old people sitting alone with their dead; black crosses painted at the entrances of AIDS-stricken homes.
"Here, AIDS does not choose its victims among marginal groups," they wrote. "It touches the entire sexually active population, men and women alike. Extreme sexual liberty, a weak sense of hygiene and a lack of medical and social support have made the populations of these parts a particularly homogeneous risk group."

It was a message that Western medical and charitable agencies, urgently wanting to alert people to the perceived dangers of HIV and AIDS, were more than ready to hear. French and Belgian newspapers, magazines and television stations took up the story and aspects of it are still being quoted around the world by AIDS organisations.

In common with many other Westerners who had seen the AIDS epidemic as a call to arms against the perils of ignorance and promiscuity, the couple had felt it was almost impossible to overstate the dangers it posed.

They helped one young villager write a letter to schoolchildren. It said so many of his team-mates had died that "we can't play football any more so behave, and you won't get the disease like we did here". The letter featured in pamphlets prepared by a European Community AIDS prevention project and was distributed widely to schools in west Africa.

"When we came here we had the textbook knowledge of AIDS in our minds," Philippe says. "That it is a sexually transmitted disease; that it would be very easily transmitted in Africa because other STDs are rampant; that many Africans are HIV-positive and would get full-blown AIDS after one or two years, faster than in Europe; and that the virus was passed from mother to child, affecting 50% of children.

"This was what we had learned from our medical studies. And the people who showed me what was happening here reinforced this belief. What I wrote in my journal was with 100% bonne conscience."

Four years later the couple recognise their understanding of the situation was utterly wrong.

In the late 1980s, medical workers almost without exception believed the disease first seen destroying the immune systems and lives of homosexual men in San Francisco and New York was a new or mutant virus, HIV, which posed a threat to the sexually-active population of the entire world.

A diagnostic test had been developed which purported to be able to identify antibodies to HIV in the blood of infected people. Most AIDS patients seemed to have these antibodies in their blood, and on the basis of that link various forms of the test were rushed on to the market.

They rapidly became big business. Doctors believed the test could identify infected people and thus help predict people at risk of developing AIDS.

It was also widely believed that because of its similarity with certain viruses found in African monkeys, HIV had come from Africa. The viruses were harmless to monkeys except in abnormal laboratory circumstances; but if HIV had recently crossed the species barrier into humans, that might be why it could be so devastating in its new hosts.

When Western scientists began to look for AIDS in Africa, their tests showed that millions already seemed to be infected with HIV, confirming the theory that this was where the virus had originated.

Furthermore, strange deaths had been reported which carried the hallmarks of AIDS. In particular, an unexpected collapse of immune system defences in young adults had allowed fungal and other infections to run wild. A few such deaths had been seen in two of Kagera's villages, Kashenye and Bukwali, in the early 1980s.

The number of cases was tiny relative to the apparent spread of HIV, but because the virus was thought to take anything from two to 10 years to cause the immune system to fail, AIDS doctors came to believe the continent was already in the grip of a terrible disaster.

That was the climate of medical and scientific opinion in which the Krynens arrived in Kagera four and a half years ago. Backed by Partage, a charity which arranges sponsorship among French families and institutions to help Third World children, they soon found themselves heading the first and largest AIDS organisation for children in Tanzania.

In preparation for their new life helping people in developing countries, the couple had abandoned their previous careers to train as nurses specialising in tropical medicine.

Today, Partage Tanzanie has 230 full-time employees who are helping 7,000 children in 15 of Kagera's villages. The charity has an income of more than £ 50,000 a year, a fortune in a country desperate for foreign currency. The staff includes 20 nurses, a doctor, a pharmacist, a laboratory technician, office staff and teachers. There are also scores of field workers who get to know the children, caring for them at day centres, monitoring their health and ensuring they are well fed.

The couple's first intimation that there might be something wrong with the standard medical model of HIV and AIDS came when they started to try to organise help for children in the border villages. "Our aim was to help the people help their children," says Evelyne. "But in some of the villages we found nobody was interested in the future, or in the kids, any more. "One reason, we thought, was that they had been told 40-50% were infected and were going to die, and this in a context where people were indeed dying a lot, because of poverty and an upsurge in malaria. The young people were convinced they were going to die anyway, so why should they think of the children or the future.

"We said that even if 50% are infected, 50% are not, so let us find out which are which. Then those who are free of the virus can think about the future again."

A pilot study offering HIV tests to their own staff provided the next shock: only 5% were positive, although almost all were young and sexually active. Perhaps they were unrepresentative, the Krynens thought, because their level of education was above average.

So last year, they proposed a mass testing programme to the villagers of Bukwali. Encouraged by the promise that a clinic would be established to give free treatment to anyone testing positive, about 850 people agreed to take part almost the entire population aged between 18 and 60. This time, 13.7% were found to be HIV-positive still much lower than the villagers had been led to believe.

The Krynens have found that one positive test cannot be relied upon for a HIV diagnosis, even though in many African countries a single test is all that can be afforded. A wide variety of parasitical and other infections can trigger a false positive result and repeated testing frequently shows the same patient to be negative.

The villagers may have shown a higher rate of HIV-positives simply because they were older, with an average age of about 42, compared with 24 in the staff study. They had been exposed for longer to "whatever it is in Africa that can so readily cause the blood to test positive", says Evelyne.

"We have noticed that with the women, the more children they have, the more likely they are to be positive. We have five HIV-positive women on our staff, and all have children but a stable life.
"It could be because being more in contact with doctors and hospitals, and taking more drugs, or even just giving birth, causes you to accumulate reactivity to the test. It may not have anything to do with a virus."

Even more dramatically, the Krynens' studies have shown no connection between HIV-positivity and risk of illness. Fifty-four villagers were ill with complaints such as pneumonia and fungal infections that might have contributed to an AIDS diagnosis, but just as many of these were HIV-negative (29) as positive (25). When they were given appropriate treatment, most recovered.

"All of a sudden you put all you have been told about the disease in the garbage can, and try to reconsider," Evelyne says. "Once you know HIV means nothing any more, once you know it is not true there is an epidemic, you doubt everything you believed before.

"The 15 villages we have looked at are in the most affected area of a region that is supposed to be at the epicentre of AIDS in Africa.

"When you listen to the people, you find they had been shocked by some deaths where the effects on the body were very visual, with fungus infections and skin rashes. But these can be secondary effects of antibiotics, and the people who died with these conditions had all been treated before for conditions such as bronchitis. Nothing is sure; everything is just wind."

Most of the first deaths reported as AIDS were in young men trading in black-market goods in the aftermath of the Ugandan war. "It started at the border, where people were dealing in drugs as well as other goods," says Philippe.

"It's true this group had money and was affected with immune suppression and a wasting syndrome. But it was not because they had sex like rabbits that they died. This is what was put in people's minds by missionaries and other people, but whatever killed them was not sexually transmitted, because they have not killed their partners. They have not killed the prostitutes they were using; these girls are still prostitutes in the same place.

"Was it a special booze? Was it an amphetamine or aphrodisiac? It is difficult to give more than hints, but when you listen to the people's descriptions of those first affected, you find they were saying they had been poisoned. If the local people said that, for two or three years before the word AIDS came to the region, why don't we believe them a bit, and look at what could have poisoned them?"

Evelyne adds: "There is not a trace of evidence for it being sexually transmitted. I will spend a night with an HIV-positive person, if he's handsome enough I'll do it to prove it."

Studies elsewhere in Africa have shown a close correlation between HIV-positivity and risk of illness, but the Krynens think this may be a consequence of health workers and patients giving up hope in the face of an HIV "death sentence".

"If you look at the sick people only, and test them, you may find many who are positive," Philippe said. "If you do the contrary, and test the whole population of a village, you seize an instant picture of a real state.

"We have fewer casualties, proportionately, in those who test positive than in those who are negative. That may be because they are able to report to our clinic where they are treated free. They have a little flu, a backache, a boil, and they get a nurse, a smile, and do much better than the poor fellow who tested negative."

The couple tried from the start to play down the significance of a positive test result. Today they are continuing to use the HIV test, "just to prove that we have to stop doing this, that it has nothing to do with AIDS". They are training their field workers not to mention HIV or AIDS, but instead to deal with any known disease they encounter with the best treatment available, regardless of the patient's HIV status. "It is not known whether HIV causes AIDS," they say in a pamphlet produced for the team. "It is time to come back to science and abandon magic thinking."

Philippe now declares: "There is no AIDS. It is something that has been invented. There are no epidemiological grounds for it; it doesn't exist for us."

If Kagera is not, after all, in the grip of an epidemic of "HIV disease", and if there is no AIDS, where have the thousands of orphans come from?

The answer, say the Krynens, is that most of the children are not orphans at all. Their final disillusionment was to discover that although many children are raised by their grandparents, that is a long-standing cultural feature of the region.

"The parents expatriate themselves a lot. They move away from the region, sending a little money, returning little or never, but still have many children in the village," Philippe explains. "They are outwardly orphans, but raised by the grandmother or grandfather. It has always been like this here; they may need help, but it has nothing to do with AIDS. "Polygamy is also rampant here and they don't raise all the children. They select very few and the others are just made and abandoned." Other children were born to prostitutes.

"You come as a European and ask: 'Who has no mother or father?' They produce all these children, even though they have a mother or father in another place.

"We have been shown false orphans since the beginning children who have parents who never died, but who will not show up any more. And when the parent has died, nobody has been asking why. It has nothing to do with an epidemic.

"Families just bring them as orphans, and if you ask how the parents died they will say AIDS. It is fashionable nowadays to say that, because it brings money and support.

"If you say your father has died in a car accident it is bad luck, but if he has died from AIDS there is an agency to help you. The local people have seen so many agencies coming, called AIDS support programmes, that they want to join this group of victims. Everybody claims to be a victim of AIDS nowadays. And local people working for AIDS agencies have become rich. They have built homes in Dar es Salaam, they have their motorbikes; they have benefited a lot."

The children usually thrive once they are properly fed and cared for, although some are so poorly from birth, regardless of "HIV", that they remain vulnerable to infections.

Philippe says: "In all the children we have lost there was a very well designated reason, an illness we could not cope with because we hadn't the means to do it: heart failure, TB treated too late, cerebral malaria, acute hepatitis probably caused by a drug taken for the wrong reasons. You have no right to call any of these deaths AIDS. I can't tell you of a single child I have followed who has died of a so-called AIDS-related illness."

The Krynens have an adopted Tanzanian son, Joseph, 5, whose one-time diarrhoea, coughing and wasting were said at a local hospital to be untreatable because of HIV. Today he is cheerful, in near-normal health and vigorously active.

"Joseph is what people call an AIDS baby, but he is living well," says Philippe. "He is a sample of the manufactured AIDS you can have in this region.

"We put him on anti-fungal drugs for his diarrhoea, and sent him to France in January this year for bronchial washing and now look at the kid.

"Whenever I have been able to follow people reported to have AIDS for any length of time, I have seen them to be cured. When you really look into it, they are not AIDS cases. So where are these cases? Always in the hands of other people hospitals, reporters, photographers.

"A 65-year-old who tested HIV-positive had been getting sick, suffering stomach troubles and losing weight. I explained to him that HIV and AIDS were very different things, that we could not really make a link between them. The other day I heard that the fellow is not sick any more. He doesn't believe he is going to get AIDS. He has regained four kilos and is doing very well. This type of resuscitation is very common in our programme.

"A woman of about 40, with two daughters, was dying of chronic diarrhoea and chest infections, said to be HIV-related. Her husband was said to have died of AIDS, although nobody has been able to tell me precisely what killed him.

"We admitted one of the daughters to our day-care centre, supported the other at school with books and meals, and treated the mother with rifampicin, a drug normally reserved for TB which we have found to be very effective in such cases. After a month she did not have diarrhoea any more, she was able to go to the fields again and has started to gain weight. I can swear to you that this woman will not be sick for a long time, as long as she knows we are supporting her. We have stolen another AIDS case from the statistics.

"It is good to know that this epidemic which was going to wipe out Africa is just a big bubble of soap."

Posters warning of the dangers of ukimwi (AIDS) adorn the cabins of the Victoria, a steamer that ferries passengers on the nine-hour journey from Mwanza, on the southern shore of Lake Victoria, to Bukoba.

When the Krynens first made the journey they found a small town with only a handful of foreigners and few cars. Despite the concern of doctors over an apparently high rate of HIV-positivity, AIDS had not become a topic of widespread attention.

Today, as the ferry arrives the tiny port seizes up with vehicles, including several white Land-Rovers and Toyotas characteristic of the numerous AIDS agencies that have flourished in much of central Africa.

"We have everybody coming here now the World Bank, the churches, the Red Cross, the UN Development Programme, the African Medical Research Foundation about 17 organisations reportedly doing something for AIDS in Kagera," says Philippe. "It brings jobs, cars the day there is no more AIDS, a lot of development is going to go away."

The Krynens work hard. They keep files on all their donor families and careful records of how the money is spent. Their home, a modest bungalow on a hillside overlooking Lake Victoria, is the hub of the project, with its own HIV-testing laboratory. All day a stream of workers comes by to give feedback and take directions. A few children who have nowhere else to go live in an adjoining building.

When direct, practical help is given to suffering people, perhaps it doesn't matter too much whether the children are AIDS orphans or not. But the Krynens are angry because false information continues to be fed to Africa and the world.

"Africa is a market for many things, an experimental ground for many organisations and a 'good conscience' ground for many charities," Philippe says.

"It is very easy to 'do good' in Africa. It is so disorganised that the one who is doing the good is also the one reporting the good he is doing. So it is a perfect field for charity the fake charity which is 99% of the charity in Africa, charity which benefits the benefactors."

They speak especially strongly about this because of their own involvement in triggering an invasion of AIDS agencies to Kagera. They now know that the stories they told, of houses and villages abandoned because of AIDS, were untrue.

"Not one such village can be witnessed by a team of journalists led by me," Philippe says. "The houses that were empty were closed because they were the second or third homes of someone in Dar es Salaam. I learned this later.

"I have never seen a village with no adults, where children are like wolves in the forest. You know who is responsible for these stories? Partly, Partage. We said that if we did not do something very quickly, these villages would be emptied of adults and children would be like wild animals. 

The stories have been printed and reprinted, without the 'if'. "My medical studies led me to believe that AIDS was devastating and the people who showed me the situation here reinforced this belief. I jumped into this, and made others believe it. And now I know it was not true. But I know many more things that were not true. Nothing was true.

"It is terrible to consider you have done so many things you thought worthwhile, when in fact you were misled. It is difficult to adjust afterwards. Nobody knows who is responsible for the first misinterpretation, but as time passes it gets bigger and bigger.

"These ideas were not based on any studies; they were just fashion. But when you are here, and you have to witness the reality of what happens in the field, you cannot agree with any of the statements they are making in Europe about AIDS in Africa. We discovered we were in a full-blown lie about AIDS. Everybody participates in this lie, willingly or not. No individual is responsible, but it is a big scandal.

"The world has been brainwashed about AIDS. It has become a disease in itself, without the necessity of having sick people any more. You don't need AIDS patients to have an AIDS epidemic nowadays, because what is wrong doesn't need to be proved. Nobody checks; AIDS exists by itself. "We came here to help orphans of AIDS. Now we are facing a situation where there are no orphans and no AIDS.

"We are in the heart of AIDS country. You are talking to people who 'discovered' AIDS here, and who now say it is a lie. We expect to have to pay for what we say. It will be the price of truth." *

Postscript: "First, the Krynen's annual grant of 350.000 pound from the European Union was withdrawn. Then they were given 14 days to leave Tanzania. Only an 11th-hour reprieve by the foward-looking Tanzanian Prime Minister J.S. Malecela saved the day for Philippe and his wife. Malecela saw through the pressure from abroad and decided he would not throw out the French couple whose only sin was to be truthful about the sate of AIDS in Africa.... Evelyne could not stand the heat of the international opprobrium heaped on them and left for France." (Source: New African, Sept. 1996)

AFRICAN AIDS: TRUE OR FALSE?
By Neville Hodgkinson, Zambia
The Sunday Times (London) 5 Sept. 1993

Zambian doctors, faced with an enormous gap between reports of people testing HIV positive and the number of people falling ill with AIDS, are calling for a reappraisal of the idea that a positive test means a person is liable to develop the disease.
They say that different HIV test procedures in Africa produce such widely differing results that their use should be re-examined. Yet at present some people are being "frightened to death" by a positive diagnosis. By the end of last year, the National AIDS Prevention and Control Programme had received a cumulative total of 7,124 reports of full-blown AIDS since the first cases were recorded in 1985. That represents fewer than a thousand a year, relatively few in a nation of 8m people.
But, according to screening surveys conducted late last year, as many as four out of 10 sexually active people are now testing HIV positive, and a million Zambians could be infected with the virus. Those findings have horrified most politicians and AIDS workers, and spurred the government into launching a new anti-AIDS campaign.
Guy Scott, an MP and former cabinet minister, says the disease threatens to orphan 2m children, and to take the lives of large numbers of staff in companies, public utilities and government. "It is ripping through the system. It is an absolute disaster," he said.
But Dr Francis Kasolo, head of virology at the University Teaching Hospital in Lusaka, said work in his department suggests the HIV figures cannot be taken at face value.
"We have found a big problem with false positives. When we repeat the tests, there are a lot of disparities in the results. A test kit from one manufacturer behaves differently from another's." The conclusion, he said, was that "most of our results are more or less compromised".
Most of the country's 80 testing centres were unable to afford a more expensive, confirmatory procedure after an initial positive test. Even that second test, known as Western Blot, produced widely differing results.
A third, rapid test, still in use at some clinics, had been shown to produce up to 40% false positive results in patients infected with malaria. Blood "stickyness" of patients, unrelated to HIV, also produced false positives.
Dr Wilfred Boayue, the World Health Organisation's representative in Zambia, says the recent surveys show such a big increase in positive results compared with six to seven years ago, when the proportion was only about 5 to 8%, that he shares concern that the country is in the grip of an HIV epidemic.
Kasolo, however, believes changes in the type of test kit used may contribute to the changing picture. He says international aid for the developing countries is often tied to use of materials provided by the donor nation.
"Most of the kits are supplied by the donors. If one decides not to provide funds any more, we move to another who will, and the kits come from that country instead. So the kits vary a lot: reporting can be high or low, depending on the kit.
"We have had individuals tested in one laboratory, and told they are positive, who move onto another, where they are negative."
Kasolo said the picture had been further confused by a phenomenon called "transient antibody to HIV" reported at a recent international meeting. A Uganda-based professor of virology had seen that some HIV positive patients subsequently tested negative.
Kasolo agreed with a recent call by scientists in Australia for use of HIV test kits to be reappraised, in the light of evidence that many conditions apart from HIV infection such as TB, malaria, malnutrition and multiple infections can cause a person to test positive.
"It is important that we address the whole issue of HIV in Africa scientifically," Kasolo said. "There is something going on that we do not understand."
Dr Sitali Maswenyeho, a paediatrician at the University Teaching Hospital and former fellow in AIDS research at the University of Miami, said he had long argued against the HIV test. "It's non specific," he said. "The test itself is killing a lot of people here. The stigma is doing the damage.
"We have malnutrition, bad water, poor sanitation; and when on top of that you are told you have an incurable disease, that really cuts off people's lives."
Despite concerns on the tests' validity, the presence of a severe form of immune system failure, affecting mainly sexually active people, is generally acknowledged.
There is argument, however, over its causes. Kasolo questions the "new virus" theory maintaining that a variety of sexually transmitted infections might be responsible. This view is shared by many older Zambians.
David Chipanta, 22, an HIV positive man helping with the work of an AIDS education and counselling organisation, says: "People in the villages tell us it is not new, but that it has become worse because of promiscuity."
Chipanta disagrees, arguing that even in the past, people were promiscuous. But he supports the challenge to HIV testing. * 

CRY, BELOVED COUNTRY
How Africa Became the Victim of a Non-Existent Epidemic of HIV/AIDS
By Neville Hodgkinson

AIDS; Virus or Drug Induced?


Global Retreat Centre, Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual University, Oxford, UK

It has become increasingly clear during the 1990's that in prosperous, developed countries, AIDS is remaining almost exclusively confined to people with clearly defined risks to their immune system regardless of HIV. These risks include heavy drug use, promiscuous receptive anal intercourse, or, as with the injections given to patients with haemophilia before the arrival of high purity Factor 8, repeated exposure to other people's blood. In Britain, out of a cumulative total of 6929 cases of AIDS in the first ten years of the epidemic, only 63 were in heterosexuals who were not obvious members of one of the known risk groups. In the United States, a 1992 National Research Council report found that many geographical areas and population groups were virtually untouched by AIDS, and would probably remain so.
These facts do not fit the theory that the world is in the grip of a deadly new infectious disease, putting at risk almost all sexually active people. However, that theory appeared to gain support from reports that millions of Africans are HIV-infected, and that hundreds of thousands are dying from the disease, with men and women equally at risk. What is happening to Africa today, it was argued, should serve as a warning of what may happen to the rest of the world tomorrow, even if it takes longer than had been expected.

In March, 1993, a television documentary was shown in Britain which challenged the by now conventional view of Africa as a land devastated by AIDS. It was based on a two-month investigation in Uganda and the Ivory Coast, and was made by Meditel, an independent company that had previously aired the views of scientists who argue HIV is not the cause of AIDS. It concluded that Africa was not in the grip of an AIDS epidemic, but that panic over the disease was leading to a tragic diversion of resources from genuine medical needs.

The film crew were accompanied during their inquiries by Dr. Harvey Bialy, a scientist with long experience of Africa, whom I interviewed at the time for an article in The Sunday Times. He had concluded there was 'absolutely no believable, persuasive evidence that Africa is in the midst of a new epidemic of infectious immuno-deficiency'. But because international funds were available for AIDS and HIV work, politicians and health workers had an incentive to classify traditional African diseases as AIDS. The problem was compounded by the fact that HIV testing was frequently misleading in Africa, as the tests reacted to antibodies to other diseases, producing high rates of false positives.

Bialy, a microbiologist working as research editor of Bio/Technology magazine, has been visiting Africa since 1975, and has spent a total of eight years working there. On the face of it, this gave him considerably more authority than the large numbers of western scientists and other workers whose first exposure to the continent was brought about by AIDS.

He was angry that so many damaging claims had been made about AIDS in Africa on the basis of so little science. 'The only utterly new phenomenon I have seen is in the drug-abusing prostitutes in Abidjan in the Ivory Coast', he told me. 'These girls come from Ghana, from families of prostitutes who are brought in by the busload. They have been doing this for generations, and never became sick until now. What is new is that these girls are addicted to viciously adulterated, smokeable heroin and cocaine. It completely destroys them. They look exactly like the inner-city crack-addicted prostitutes of the United States.'

'Otherwise, I have seen malaria, tuberculosis, diarrhoeal diseases, which arguably have got more severe; but by all the laws of scientific reasoning this is caused by the general economic decline in these countries, the decline of health care and the development of drug-resistant strains. All these things can explain exactly what is going on much more efficiently and persuasively, and to much greater good for the public health, than saying the diseases are being made worse by HIV'.

Our four-column story about these and other doubts, headlined 'Epidemic of AIDS in Africa 'a tragic myth', brought a crop of contrary assertions, but no evidence in rebuttal. My confidence in the story was further boosted by an astonishing statement Bialy had made about the HIV test.

Bio/Technology had a paper in press, he told me, which did more than highlight a problem with false positives: it challenged the very basis of the test as indicating the presence of a specific virus, arguing that it had never been validated against the accepted 'gold standard' for a diagnostic test, isolation of the virus itself.

I found this hard to take in, and did not pursue the story further immediately. But over subsequent weeks, I studied the paper concerned and corresponded with the main author, Eleni Papadopulos-Eleopulos, a biophysicist at the Royal Perth Hospital. To my continuing astonishment I found that there was indeed a mass of evidence, pulled together in Eleopulos's enormous review article, that what had come to be called 'the AIDS test' was scientifically invalid. The proteins detected by the test kits were not specific to a unique retrovirus. Positive results were produced in people whose immune systems had been activated by a wide variety of conditions, including tuberculosis, multiple sclerosis, malaria, malnutrition, and even a course of flu jabs. Patients with AIDS, and promiscuous gay men leading lives likely to expose their immune systems to multiple challenges, were certainly much more likely to test positive than healthy Americans, but for reasons that need not have anything to do with a deadly new virus.

The possible implications of the Bio/Technology article for an understanding of AIDS in Africa were clearly enormous. African countries were those where the tests might be at their most meaningless, because of the widespread ill-health caused by malnutrition and associated chronic diseases. Had an entire continent been panicked by western scientists into believing it was in the grip of a deadly epidemic, on the basis of a test that had never been shown to be valid for the retrovirus whose presence it was claimed to detect?

I faxed the article to four virus experts in case some glaring error invalidating its reasoning had been missed by Bio/Technology. One did not reply, and another preferred not to comment. A third, Dr. Philip Mortimer, of the Virus Reference Division at Britain's Central Public Health Laboratory, wrote a courteous reply acknowledging that the article 'does make some fair points about the weakness of the western blot test when it is used incautiously and without followup'. He added, however, that 'the situation it describes is not typical of this country where initial positive serological (antibody) screening tests are confirmed by (i) further investigations, usually a combination of different ELISA assays but sometimes including Western Blot and (ii) a test of a followup specimen. Only if the positive reactions on both specimens are confirmed, usually in a reference laboratory, is a positive report issued'. Perhaps this more stringent procedure helped to explain why Britain had only some 23 000 seropositive people, compared with an estimated 1 million in the United States and multimillions in Africa. But Eleopulos et al. had not just criticised the Western Blot test. They had cited evidence indicating that the ELISA test might be equally meaningless. In Russia in 1990, for example, out of 20 000 positive screening tests, only 112 were confirmed using western blot. A similar study in 1991 confirmed only 66 out of approximately 30 000 positive test results. Clearly, by using multiple tests giving very different results, false positives would be greatly reduced. But this still did not answer Eleopulos's charge that there was nothing in the literature to indicate why any of the tests should be considered reliable as indicating the presence of a specific retrovirus. Besides, even if the damage done by false positives was being reduced in the UK by repeated testing, that was no comfort with regard to the situation in Africa, where because of cost considerations, most HIV diagnoses were being made on the basis of a single test.

Dr. Mortimer also commented that diagnostic capability had recently been advanced by the introduction of a commercial polymerase chain reaction assay for detecting minute quantities of HIV genetic material.

'Comparison of results using this procedure with those obtained by antibody tests show a very close correlation confirming the reliability of HIV antibody tests', he wrote. However, as the Bio/Technology paper pointed out, this correlation might be the result of some quite different cause common to both the PCR test and the antibody test. PCR signalled the presence of only a small stretch of genetic material; perhaps it was picking up the presence of a sequence made detectable by the same stimulus as that which caused a person to test antibodypositive, a stimulus which need not have anything to do with 'HIV'. The Bio/Technology paper cited evidence in support of this idea. For example, a positive PCR reverted to negative when exposure to risk factors was discontinued; and monocytes from HIVpositive patients in which no HIV DNA could be detected, even by PCR, became positive for HIV RNA after immune activation by cocultivation with activated Tcells.

The fourth virus expert was Professor Robin Weiss, head of the Chester Beatty Laboratories at the Institute of Cancer Research, London, who with Dr. Richard Tedder, a virologist at the Middlesex Hospital in London, developed and patented Britain's first HIV test in conjunction with the Wellcome drug company. Dr. Weiss took the trouble to write a twopage letter concerning the Bio/Technology paper. His tone was set in the first paragraph: 'It is the sort of paper I would have stopped reading by paragraph 5 if you hadn't requested an opinion'. Later, he commented: 'Sorry, if the authors were my students, I'd mark this essay Bminus. Of the 1000 or so papers on HIV/AIDS that must have been published in the last six months, I'd put this in the bottom 10% for being worth reporting'. He acknowledged that the paper might have had some merit if it had been published around 1986/7, as 'there were serious difficulties and much variation in assessing Western Blot data, and some of the ELISA tests were still giving false positives'. But since then, he argued, the tests had been greatly improved because they used HIV antigens produced in bacteria by recombinant DNA technology, rather than grown from sera taken from AIDS patients.

It seemed to me that he had not answered the central complaint, that no one had ever established that the proteins held to indicate the active presence of HIV really are related to the virus in people who test positive, as opposed to other possibilities raised by the Bio/Technology authors. I wrote back along those lines. Robin Weiss responded with a short, unreferenced assertion: 'As I wrote, that might have been a valid argument six years ago, but not today as the proteins have been specific for some years'.

On August 1, 1993, the Editor ran our most challenging story to date across the top of the front page. The headline read: 'New Doubts Over AIDS Infections As HIV Test Declared Invalid'. The story began:

The 'AIDS test' is scientifically invalid and incapable of determining whether people are really infected with HIV, according to a new report by a team of Australian scientists who have conducted the first extensive review of research surrounding the test.

Doctors should think again about its use, say the authors. 'A positive HIV status has such profound implications that nobody should be required to bear this burden without solid guarantees of the verity of the test and its interpretation', they conclude. The findings, likely to cause intense debate in the medical fraternity and anguish for many HIVpositive people, are contained in an article published by the respected science journal, Bio/Technology. Many people who appear to be infected by HIV, say the researchers, can be suffering from other conditions such as malaria or malnutrition that produce a positive result in the test. Even flu jabs can produce the same effect. As a result, predictions by the World Health Organisation that millions are set to die because of being HIVpositive may be wildly inaccurate. The paper also lends powerful support to the theory, held by growing numbers of scientists, that HIV is not the true cause of AIDS. One of its authors, Eleni Eleopulous, a biophysicist at the Royal Perth Hospital, said this weekend: 'There is no proof that people labelled as 'HIVpositive' are infected with such a retrovirus. We should really question the role of HIV in the causation of AIDS.'

The claims were so at odds with conventional thinking on this enormously important subject that I had been nervous of writing the article, having already had to cope with huge waves of fierce criticism and comment in relation to previous articles questioning the HIV theory of AIDS. But this time, there was hardly a word of protest, let alone any arguments of rebuttal. No scientific papers to validate the tests. And no comment elsewhere in the media. We were being privately 'rubbished' by the AIDS experts to whom specialist writers turn in such cases. But it seemed their case was too weak for them to wish to state it publicly.

This gave me the push I needed to undertake a venture that the Editor had long since approved, namely, to mount our own investigation of AIDS in Africa. Was the situation as described by Harvey Bialy in Uganda and Ivory Coast also true of other central African countries? On August 18, armed with the Bio/Technology paper, I flew to Nairobi, Kenya and began to make inquiries.

It soon became clear to me that because of the idea that HIV was lethal and rampant, there was a consensus belief that one could hardly be too alarmist in public pronouncements about Aids. The Kenya Times, for example, earlier that year had reported estimates by the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) that the country had about 100 000 AIDS cases, and about one million people 'who have the AIDScausing virus'. It added that 'once a person is infected with the killer disease, his next step is definitely death'. But the figures were impressionistic. They were put out by researchers who had been alarmed to find that about half of the people going to various hospitals for general medical reasons were testing positive. Perhaps the whole edifice of fear and concern sprang from a scientifically unvalidated test, and a misinterpretation of the meaning of a positive test result.

According to KEMRI's Dr George Gachihi, 'when you see a young man or woman die after a short illness, chances are that he succumbed to the AIDS disease'. It was that perspective which led the Kenya Times to report that 'thousands of Kenyans die each year from AIDS, though the certificates always indicate that they died from other causes'. When one looked at the figures through the perspective of the Bio/Technology critique, however, there was no longer any need to see the deaths as other than from the stated causes. Similarly, despite stories about hospitals being filled to overflowing with AIDS victims, when I visited the huge Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi I found that although there was immense overcrowding, only a handful of patients had been admitted with an AIDS diagnosis.

I also found that political factors were playing a part. Kenya had lost an estimated $300 m in desperately needed foreign currency in November 1991, when the industrialized world tried to force political and economic reform on the country by cutting aid. A recent crisis announcement on AIDS by the country's health minister was seen within the international aid community as an attempt to win back donor sympathy and funds, according to the journal Africa Confidential. 'A farfromveiled theory in circulation says figures which show AIDS spiralling out of control have been massaged to extract sympathy', the journal said.

'In stark contrast to the recent past, when AIDS was a banned subject to protect the tourist industry, the press has started reporting ever more startling increases in AIDS cases and newspapers are competing for horror stories of AIDS deaths'.

It did seem to be true that doctors were reporting growing numbers of AIDS cases, especially among prostitutes. But in this latter group, the actual cause of death was often unknown. When a prostitute who had tested HIVpositive subsequently disappeared, it was assumed that she had gone back to her home town to die of AIDS. I also found that researchers knew nothing of the doubts over the HIV test, and had not established the extent to which the increase in cases of immune system dysfunction was genuinely the result of a new virus, as opposed to a consequence of an intensification in longestablished threats to health. According to some observers, poverty had driven millions of women into prostitution, and young African males had also been drawn into the trade.

There was nothing to support the apocalyptic vision of Africa's future espoused by the World Health Organisation on the basis of its HIV statistics. I found in Kenya as elsewhere that the statistics were often based on small clinical surveys, with the results then writ large by computer to form an estimate for the country as a whole and all this using a test which the Bio/Technology paper had shown to be unvalidated and probably invalid. One WHO official told me: 'AIDS is there. No doubt about it. And it is widespread and increasing. My colleagues in the other countries can tell you the same'. But she added frankly: 'If you come with this postulate that there are a lot of false HIVpositives, it is very difficult to tell'.

The first story I filed back to The Sunday Times focused on the experience of a remarkable doctor whom I met in Nairobi, Father Angelo D'Agostino. Then aged 67, he was a former surgeon who trained as a Jesuit priest and became a professor of psychiatry in Washington before going to Africa ten years previously. In 1992 he had founded Nyumbani, a hospice for abandoned and orphaned HIVpositive children, after finding that because of the panic over AIDS, nowhere else would take them in. Regardless of HIV, there were good reasons why the foundlings, whose plight he learned of through work with a local Barnardo's home, should often perish. Abandoned by their shocked and stigmatised HIVpositive mothers, the children died of multiple infections, malnutrition, and misery.

'People think a positive test means no hope, so the children are relegated to the back wards of hospitals which have no resources, and they die', D'Agostino said. 'They are very sick when they come to us. Usually they are depressed, withdrawn, and silent. Some have been in very poor conditions. But as a result of their care here, they put on weight, recover from their infections, and thrive. Hygiene is excellent, that they wouldn't have in the slums they have usually been living in. Nutrition is very good: they get vitamin supplements, cod liver oil, greens every day, plenty of protein. They are really flourishing. Even one that came in with TB is doing better now'.

A year on from opening the hospice, D'Agostino was puzzled. Elsewhere in Kenya and across subSaharan Africa, according to WHO, tens of thousands of children were dying because of HIV, usually in their first year. But most of the Nyumbani babies were thriving, as I knew from spending a couple of hours there with several of them crawling all over me. Only one of the first 45 children had been lost a sixweekold who was so sick when she came that she had to go to hospital almost immediately, and died two weeks later.

In an extensive interview, D'Agostino told me: 'I'm a physician, and I bought the theory that HIV is the cause of AIDS. But there are not a lot of things I would die for, and certainly not a scientific hypothesis. In fact, I would welcome with open arms any proof that these children will be free of disease'.

'It is surprising. We expected more deaths, and a lot more serious illness. According to most predictions, the children should have died within two to three months of coming to us. Instead, we have now had to set up a nursery school, which I didn't think would be needed, and I'm planning to negotiate their entry into primary school'. He had also been preparing to establish group therapy for the mothers and other caregivers, to deal with their grief at the loss of the children. Instead, the only losses were happy ones: some of the children became HIVnegative, and were taken back by relatives or ordinary children's homes. Even those who persistently tested positive were staying well. 'I don't have any explanation for it. Will they be alive this time next year? I have no reason to doubt it: they are healthy'.

As my travels progressed, through Zambia, Zimbabwe and Tanzania, it became more and more obvious that there were great uncertainties over the extent of African AIDS. The belief that there was an epidemic had taken root in many people's minds, and some unexpected or unexplained deaths tended to be seen in the light of this belief. But was there really a new, clearly identifiable clinical condition?

In Lusaka, Zambia, I was told by Guy Scott, an MP and former cabinet minister, that the disease threatens to orphan 2 million children, and to take the lives of large numbers of staff in companies, public utilities, and government. 'It is ripping through the system. It is an absolute disaster', he said. Screening surveys conducted in late 1992 had found that as many as four out of ten sexually active people were testing HIVpositive, spurring the government into launching a new antiAIDS campaign.

But several doctors at the University Teaching Hospital in Lusaka had a different view. They responded warmly to the Bio/Technology paper, finding that it reflected and helped to explain their own experience. They had been particularly puzzled by an enormous gap between reports of people testing HIVpositive, and the number of people reported as falling ill with AIDS fewer than 1000 a year, in a nation of 8 million people.

Dr. Franci Kasolo, head of virology, said work in his department suggested the HIV figures could not be taken at face value. 'We have found a big problem with false positives', he said. 'When we repeat the tests, there are a lot of disparities in the results. A test kit from one manufacturer behaves differently from another's'. The conclusion was that 'most of our results are more or less compromised'.

Most of the country's 80 testing centres were unable to afford confirmatory Western Blot testing after an initial positive ELISA. And in any case, the Western Blot produced widely differing results. A third, rapid test had been shown to produce up to 40% false positive results.

Dr. Wilfrid Boayue, the WHO representative in Zambia, said the recent surveys had shown such a big increase in positive results compared with six to seven years previously, when the proportion was only about 5 to 8%, that he shared concern that the country was in the grip of an HIV epidemic. Kasolo, however, thought changes in the type of test kit used might contribute to the changing picture. He had a lot of experience with this, because international aid for developing countries is often tied to use of materials provided by the donor nations, and the donors keep changing.

'Most of the kits are supplied by the donors. If one decides not to provide funds any more, we move to another who will, and the kits come from that country instead. So the kits vary a lot: reporting can be high or low, depending on the kit. We have had individuals tested in one laboratory, and told they are positive, who move on to another, where they are negative. It is important that we address the whole issue of HIV in Africa scientifically. There is something going on that we do not understand'. Dr. Sitali Maswenyeho, a paediatrician at the University Teaching Hospital and former fellow in AIDS research at the University of Miami, said he had long argued against the HIV test. 'It's nonspecific', he said. 'The test itself is killing a lot of people here. The stigma is doing the damage. We have malnutrition, bad water, poor sanitation, and when on top of that you are told you have an incurable disease, that really cuts off people's lives'.

Despite concerns over the validity of the HIV test, the presence of a severe form of immune system failure, affecting mainly sexually active people, was widely acknowledged. But there was argument over its causes. Kasolo maintained that a variety of sexually transmitted infections might be responsible, a view shared by many older Zambians. Others felt it might be associated with overuse of aphrodisiac drugs, made from plant sources.

David Chipanta, 22, an HIVpositive man helping with the work of an AIDS education and counselling organization, said: 'People in the villages tell us it is not new, but that it has become worse because of promiscuity'. Despite disagreeing with that view he argued that promiscuity was itself nothing new he supported the challenge to HIV testing.

In Zimbabwe, health authorities were convinced that AIDS was a real threat, but Dr. Timothy Stamps, the minister of health and child welfare, was also concerned that WHO and the 'AIDS industry' had fostered a damaging epidemic of what he called 'HIVitis' in Africa. 'My basic worry is that it's distracting money and attention and personnel from the known problems such as malaria, tuberculosis, sexually transmitted diseases and safe motherhood', he said. He was particularly disturbed by WHO advice discouraging women who had tested HIVpositive from breastfeeding their babies.

Despite clear evidence confirming the thesis that the HIV story was gravely flawed, it was hard for me to be sure, when faced with widely differing views among those I met, whether or not some new, epidemic condition was afflicting Africa. But in Tanzania, I met two medically trained charity workers whose dramatic testimony provided the clearest evidence yet that the continent was not engulfed by an epidemic of AIDS and a profound insight into how the story of an epidemic had come about.

In midlife, after finding they could have no children of their own, Philippe and Evelyne Krynen trained in France as nurses, with a specialist qualification in tropical medicine, in order to be able to dedicate the rest of their lives helping Third World orphans. In 1988, they travelled through central Africa looking for a suitable place to set up a branch of the French charity Partage, which had agreed to support them. They heard that the remote Kagera province in northern Tanzania, where Africa's first cases of AIDS were diagnosed as far back as 1983, was now an epicentre of the disease, which had orphaned thousands of children.

After a threeday journey to the province in January 1989, a tour of the worsthit places conducted by a local Lutheran bishop seemed to confirm everything they had been told. Whole villages were being destroyed, people were dying continuously in and around the main township of Bukoba, and HIV testing suggested up to half the sexually active population was infected.

Philippe, now 51, a former pilot, and Evelyne, 43, a teacher, prepared an illustrated report on their findings, Voyage des Krynen en Tanzanie, which was to prove a catalyst for world interest in the social impact of AIDS in Africa. It presented a dramatic picture: children alone in houses emptied of adults, or abandoned into the care of grandparents; a football team destroyed by the disease; old people sitting alone with their dead; black crosses painted at the entrances of AIDSstricken homes.

'Here, AIDS does not choose its victims among marginal groups', they wrote. 'It touches the entire sexually active population, men and women alike. Extreme sexual liberty, a weak sense of hygiene and a lack of medical and social support have made the populations of these parts a particularly homogeneous risk group'.

As I reported in The Sunday Times, it was a message that Western medical and charitable agencies, urgently wanting to alert people to the perceived dangers of HIV and AIDS, were more than ready to hear. US, French and Belgian newspapers, magazines and television stations took up the story. Aspects of it are still being quoted around the world by AIDS organizations.

The couple explained to me that in common with many other Westerners who had seen the AIDS epidemic as a call to arms against the perils of ignorance and promiscuity, they had felt it was almost impossible to overstate the dangers. They helped one young villager write a letter to schoolchildren. It said so many of his teammates had died that 'we can't play football any more so behave, and you won't get the disease like we did here'. The letter featured in pamphlets prepared by a European Community AIDS prevention project and was distributed widely to schools in west Africa.

'When we came here we had the textbook knowledge of AIDS in our minds', Philippe said. 'That it is a sexually transmitted disease; that it would be very easily transmitted in Africa because other STDs are rampant; that many Africans are HIVpositive and would get fullblown AIDS after one or two years, faster than in Europe; and that the virus was passed from mother to child, affecting 50% of children. This was what we had learned from our medical studies. And the people who showed me what was happening here reinforced this belief. What I wrote in my journal was with 100% bonne conscience'.

Four years on, Partage Tanzanie was now employing some 230 fulltime staff, who were helping 7000 children in 15 of Kagera's villages. There were 20 nurses, a doctor, a pharmacist, a laboratory technician, office workers and teachers; and scores of field workers who had got to know the children, caring for them at day centres, monitoring their health and ensuring they were well fed. As a result of the increasingly intimate understanding the Krynens acquired of the region and its people, allied to the questions the couple started asking arising from their own scientific training, a very different picture of what was going on started to emerge compared with their first impressions.

The first clue that there might be something wrong with the standard medical model of HIV and AIDS came when they started to try to organise help for children in the border villages. 'Our aim was to help the people help their children', Evelyne said. 'But in some of the villages we found nobody was interested in the future, or in the kids, any more. One reason, we thought, was that they had been told 4050% were infected and were going to die, and this in a context where people were indeed dying a lot, because of poverty and an upsurge in malaria'. (Antimalarial drugs had helped more children through to early adulthood, but left them still vulnerable to the disease. Previously, those who survived the illness in childhood were more likely to have lifelong immunity).

'The young people were convinced they were going to die anyway, so why should they think of the children or the future. We said that even if 50% are infected, 50% are not, so let us find out which are which. Then those who are free of the virus can think about the future again'.

A pilot study offering HIV tests to their own staff produced a shock: only 5% were positive, although almost all were young and sexually active. Perhaps they were unrepresentative, the Krynens though because their level of education was above average. So in 1992 they proposed a mass testing programme in Bukwali, a village on the border with Uganda where some of Africa's first AIDS cases had been reported nearly ten years previously.

Encouraged by the promise that a clinic would be established to give free treatment to anyone testing positive, about 850 people agreed to take part almost the entire population aged between 18 and 60. This time, 13.7% were found to be HIVpositive, still much lower than the villagers had been led to believe. The Krynens found that a single positive test could not be relied on repeat testing would frequently show the same patient to be negative. The villagers may have shown a higher rate of HIVpositives simply because they were older, with an average age of about 42 compared with 24 in the staff study. They had beer exposed for longer to 'whatever it is in Africa that can so readily cause the blood to test positive', as Evelyn put it.

'We have noticed that with the women, the more children they have, the more likely they are to be positive. We have five HIVpositive women on our staff, and all have children, but a stable life. It could be because being more in contact with doctors and hospitals, and taking more drugs, or even just giving birth, causes you to accumulate reactivity to the test. It may not have anything to do with a virus'.

The Krynens also found that when appropriate treatment was given to villagers who became ill with complaints such as pneumonia and fungal infections that might have contributed to an AIDS diagnosis, they usually recovered.

'All of a sudden you put all you have been told about the disease in the garbage can, and try to reconsider', Evelyne said. 'The 15 villages we have looked at are in the most affected area of a region that is supposed to be at the epicentre of AIDS in Africa. When you listen to the people, you find they had been shocked by some deaths where the effects on the body were very visual, with fungus infections and skin rashes. But these can be secondary effects of antibiotics, and the people who died with these conditions had all been treated before for conditions such as bronchitis. Nothing is sure; everything is just wind'.

Most of the first deaths reported as AIDS were in young men trading in blackmarket goods in the aftermath of the Ugandan war. It started at the border, where people were dealing in drugs as well as other goods, said Philippe. 'It's true this group had money and was affected with immune suppression and a wasting syndrome. But it was not because they had sex like rabbits that they died. This is what was put in people's minds by missionaries and other people, but whatever killed them was not sexually transmitted, because they have not killed their partners. They have not killed the prostitutes they were using; these girls are still prostitutes in the same place'.

'Was it a special booze? Was it an amphetamine or aphrodisiac? It is difficult to give more than hints, but when you listen to the people's descriptions of those first affected, you find they were saying they had been poisoned. If the local people said that, for two or three years before the word AIDS came to the region, why don't we believe them a bit, and look at what could have poisoned them'?

Today the couple are continuing to use the HIV test, 'just to prove that we have to stop doing this, that it has nothing to do with AIDS'. They are training their field workers not to mention HIV or AIDS, but instead to deal with any known disease they encounter with the best treatment available, regardless of the patient's HIV status. 'It is not known whether HIV causes AIDS', they say in a pamphlet produced for the team. 'It is time to come back to science and abandon magic thinking'. Philippe declares: 'There is no AIDS. It is something that has been invented. There are no epidemiological grounds for it; it doesn't exist for us'.

If Kagera is not, after all, in the grip of an epidemic of 'HIV disease', and if there is no AIDS, where have the thousands of orphans come from? The answer, say the Krynens, is that most of the children are not orphans at all. Their final disillusionment was to discover that although many children are raised by their grandparents, that is a longstanding cultural feature of the region.

'The parents expatriate themselves a lot', Philippe explains. 'They move away from the region, sending a little money, returning little or never, but still have many children in the village. They are outwardly orphans, but raised by the grandmother or grandfather. It has always been like this here; they may need help, but it has nothing to do with AIDS. Polygamy is also rampant here and they don't raise all the children. They select very few and the others are just made and abandoned'. Other children are born to prostitutes, who may spend much of the year away from the region, working in the cities.

'You come as a European and ask: 'Who has no mother or father?' They produce all these children, even though they have a mother or father in another place. We have been shown false orphans since the beginning children who have parents who never died, but who will not show up any more. And when the parent has died, nobody has been asking why. It has nothing to do with an epidemic. Families just bring them as orphans, and if you ask how the parents died they will say AIDS. It is fashionable nowadays to say that, because it brings money and support'.

'If you say your father has died in a car accident it is bad luck, but if he has died from AIDS there is an agency to help you. The local people have seen so many agencies coming, called AIDS support programmes, that they want to join this group of victims. Everybody claims to be a victim of AIDS nowadays . . . It is good to know that this epidemic which was going to wipe out Africa is just a big bubble of soap'.

Posters warning of the dangers of ukimwi (AIDS) adorn the cabins of the Victoria, a steamer that ferries passengers on the ninehour journey from Mwanza, on the southern shore of Lake Victoria, to Bukoba. When the Krynens first made the journey, they found a small town with only a handful of foreigners and few cars. Today, as the ferry arrives, the tiny port seizes up with vehicles, including the white Land Rovers and Toyotas characteristic of the numerous AIDS agencies that have flourished in much of central Africa.

'We have everybody coming here now the World Bank, the churches, the Red Cross, the UN Development Programme, the African Medical Research Foundation about 17 organizations reportedly doing something for AIDS in Kagera', Philippe said. 'It brings jobs, cars the day there is no more AIDS, a lot of development is going to go away'.

The Krynens work hard. They keep files on all their donor families and careful records of how the money is spent. Their home, a modest bungalow on a hillside overlooking Lake Victoria, is the hub of the project, with its own HIVtesting laboratory. All day a stream of workers comes by to give feedback and take directions. A few children who have nowhere else to go live in an adjoining building. With such direct, practical help being given to suffering people, perhaps it does not matter too much whether the children are AIDS orphans or not. But the Krynens are angry because false information continues to be spread to Africa and the world.

'Africa is a market for many things, an experimental ground for many organizations and a 'good conscience' ground for many charities', Philippe said. 'It is very easy to 'do good' in Africa. It is so disorganised that the one who is doing the good is also the one reporting the good he is doing. So it is a perfect field for charity the fake charity which is 99% of the charity in Africa, charity which benefits the benefactors. The Krynens felt strongly about this because of their own involvement in triggering an invasion of AIDS agencies to Kagera. They now know that the stories they told, of houses and villages abandoned because of AIDS, were untrue.

'The houses that were empty were closed because they were the second or third homes of someone in Dar es Salaam', said Philippe. And the black crosses painted outside homes were leftovers from a populalion census, not a warning of AIDS. 'I learned this later. I have never seen a village with no adults, where children are like wolves in the forest. You know who is responsible for these stories? Partly, Partage. We said that if we did not do something very quickly, these villages would be emptied of adults, and children would be like wild animals. The stories have been printed and reprinted, without the 'if' '.

'My medical studies led me to believe that AIDS was devastating and the people who showed me the situation here reinforced this belief. I jumped into this, and made others believe it. And now I know it was not true. But I know many more things that were not true. Nothing was true'.

'It is terrible to consider you have done so many things you thought worthwhile, when in fact you were misled. It is difficult to adjust afterwards. Nobody knows who is responsible for the first misinterpretation, but as time passes it gets bigger and bigger. These ideas were not based on any studies; they were just fashion. But when you are here, and you have to witness the reality of what happens in the field, you cannot agree with any of the statements they are making in Europe about AIDS in Africa. We discovered we were in a fullblown lie about AIDS. Everybody participates in this lie, willingly or not. No individual is responsible, but it is a big scandal'.

'The world has been brainwashed about AIDS. It has become a disease in itself, without the necessity of having sick people any more. You don't need AIDS patients to have an AIDS epidemic nowadays, because what is wrong doesn't need to be proved. Nobody checks; AIDS exists by itself'.

'We came here to help orphans of AIDS. Now we are facing a situation where there are no orphans and no AIDS. We are in the heart of AIDS country. You are talking to people who 'discovered' AIDS here, and who now say it is a lie. We expect to have to pay for what we say. It will be the price of truth'.

Articles I filed from Africa were often followed up or reprinted in regional and national newspapers there, after they had appeared in The Sunday Times. With so much money and prestige at stake, this caused some of the people I had interviewed to come under great pressure to recant. They responded differently to these pressures.

Father D'Agostino was upset to see the puzzlement and hope he had expressed in relation to the survival of his 'AIDS babies' put in the context of the wider critique of the HIV theory of AIDS that The Sunday Times had been airing. To the medical profession, this is a heresy, not just a different interpretation of the facts, and a press release he issued on September 17 on behalf of the Children of God Relief Institute, which runs Nyumbani, read more like a religious creed than a comment from a scientist. It stated:

Recently, the London Sunday Times ran a long frontpage story and the Nairobi Nation an editorial page 'special report'. Both papers misconstrued the facts of the unfortunate life circumstances of the children at 'Nyumbani' in order to prove an erroneous thesis. While this does no harm to the children themselves, it does a grave disservice to the larger community because it panders to the all too prevalent mental process of denial. This denial only increases the universal and deadly threat of HIV/AIDS. In order to correct these errors, we must assert:

(1) We do believe in the 'germ' theory of disease as proposed by Louis Pasteur. This universally proven theory is accepted by compassionate and credible scientists worldwide.

(2) We believe that there is a virus designated 'HIV' which has been isolated and is responsible for the fatal disease called AIDS.

(3) Since there is no cure for the ravages of the HIV virus, we believe that the only strategy to contain and prevent spreading of the disease AIDS is for all sectors of society to join hands in creating awareness and, urge action in an appropriate manner.

(4) Compassion, understanding, care and respect for human dignity must fashion any program to help those suffering from HIV/AIDS.

(5) We invite any party so inclined to help our efforts to assist in alleviating the tragic plight of those voiceless HIV/AIDS sufferers the abandoned child.

(6) We totally disagree with any scientifically unsubstantiable theory that denies the reality of the causation of the disease HIV/AIDS.

The uncertainties Father D'Agostino had clearly expressed in a recorded interview, as he pondered the surprising good health of his foundlings, were now gone, replaced by a reaffirmation of belief in the HIV doctrine of AIDS. I knew nothing of this press release at the time I was still travelling through Africa, and had not even seen the Sunday Times and although Father D'Agostino says he faxed a response to the article to the newspaper's office, it was never received there.

In fact, the first I knew of his dissatisfaction was when I received the following letter, dated October 22, after I had written to him on my return to London enclosing cuttings of my Africa articles.

Dear Neville,

I want to thank you for the courtesy of sending the article appearing in the 3rd October edition and also for the pleasant experience that we all had when you visited Nyumbani. That being said, I must confess to some reservations.

You and I look at the world with quite different perspectives. You, from that of a journalist and myself, as a committed medical man. Our goals are quite different. I, after having spent at least 14 full years in the pursuit of medical knowledge, am committed to using that eclectic knowledge for the good of mankind. I am not espousing any particular philosophy or theory when I attempt to enhance the body's (and mind's) natural healing powers. That being said then, I quite disagree with your point of view. I am trying to be charitable in assuming that you have taken this task for humanitarian reasons, but I must say there is a question about that at times.

I certainly question the Sunday Times approach to the problem because it is quite evident that they are more interested in selling copies rather than the pursuit of truth. They have no care for the terrible consequences to people when they are permanently and fatally injured by believing the misinformation that is being peddled. A primary principle in the practice of conventional medicine is that if one cannot do any good, at least do not do any harm. This principle is observed only in the breach by the Sunday Times because they are doing great harm without even considering the possibility . . . and for mere gold.

Another point: I was able to fax a response to the article but never got any sort of admission of reception or acknowledgement. Would it be possible for you to inquire as to whether or not they did receive my fax and what they plan to do about it, if anything?

Finally, I want to state that this is not a personal issue and I would look forward to your visiting us once again, but this time, being quite open about our stand with regard to the terrible consequences of the infection by the HIV virus.

With all best wishes, A. D'Agostino, SJ, MD

On October 29, I replied as follows:

Dear Father D'Agostino,

I was greatly distressed to receive your letter of October 22 today. Firstly, because neither I nor the Letters Editor had known anything of your sending a response to my article of October 3; and secondly, because of your evident distress over what you call the Sunday Times approach to the issue of HIV and AIDS. I had felt that my article was a straightforward description of what you had told me and what I had observed for myself. I also know how much both the Editor and myself have wanted to contribute to understanding about HIV and AIDS, and how wrong you are to allege that we are doing harm 'for mere gold'. Have you seen the other articles I filed? Some of the people involved in those have subsequently come under bitter attack from parties who feel both the truth and their own interests have been threatened, but perhaps the difference is that they were aware of what a contentious issue this is.

It is not possible to back away from these issues: the point of view to which the newspaper has been giving an airing is that immeasurable harm, including much loss of life resulting from panic and false diagnosis, is being done by the blind pursuit of the HIV hypothesis against much evidence of its inadequacies. Indeed, we quoted accurately Dr Timothy Stamps, Minister for Health and Child Welfare in Zimbabwe, as saying 'the HIV industry . . . is now in my view one of the biggest threats to health'.

Your own uncertainty was very clear when we met. What has happened to make you write as you did? I do apologise if you have been embroiled in a controversy against your wishes, but the strength of feeling on this issue should help to indicate to you that something may be terribly wrong in the view that your profession has currently espoused so dogmatically about the cause of AIDS.

I thank you for your kindness in emphasising that you do not see this as a personal issue. Please do send a copy of your original fax to the Letters Editor, with a copy in the post in case of further problems. Mark the letter clearly for the Letters Editor. I should also be grateful to receive a copy: the news desk fax, which is nearest to me, is ....

Neither I nor the newspaper ever received that fax from Father D'Agostino. He told me by phone, when the issue flared up again, that he had decided against sending it, after receiving my letter, feeling that it was by then too late. But that did not stop him making a statement the following January to the Independent on Sunday, a newspaper which has been most vociferous in Britain in promoting the official view on HIV and AIDS and in attacking my own reporting. In it, he condemned the 'gross distortions and quite incorrect implication' made as a result of my interviewing him, and declaring that he had received no acknowledgement of his original fax.

I like and admire Father D'Agostino and am sad that I caused him distress, but I feel quite sure we were right to run the article. The quotes directly attributed to him were taken verbatim from my recording and expressed his observations as a human being and a doctor, as opposed to a politician and defender of the HIV faith. I can understand his discomfort at the sweeping frontpage headline used on the story, 'Babies give lie to African AIDS'. There was also an unfortunate piece of editing, that attributed more uncertainty to him than he had expressed. The article I filed from Nairobi included a paragraph in which I wrote: 'The suspicion is growing that many 'AIDS' cases are really old diseases given a new name, though sometimes made worse by civil war and economic and social decline, and that people who test HIVpositive are not, as most have been led to believe, the victims of a new, inevitably lethal disease'. The edited version correctly stated that in common with growing numbers of scientists and doctors around the world, D'Agostino was beginning to question whether HIV really was the killer it had been made out to be. That was the purport of the entire interview, during which I had told him about the Bio/Technology paper and the reappraisal of the HIV theory of AIDS being sought by those doctors and scientists. But the article then went on to state that 'He, like them, suspects that many 'AIDS' cases are really old diseases given a new name . . .' etc., a suspicion I had not attributed to him.

His statement to the Independent on Sunday, however, made it plain that he was now putting all his doubts behind him. He said four children in his care had since died of AIDS out of a total of 55 with HIV, and that two or three others had AIDS. He had no doubt, the paper reported, that children infected with HIV would eventually succumb to AIDS.

Since my work in this field has so often shown me how that very expectation among doctors tends to become a selffulfilling prophecy, I rang D'Agostino in disbelief to ask him if that was really what he now thought. Yes, he said, 'I never questioned the medical model; the only thing I questioned was why they didn't die at three, why they were still alive at seven. I never questioned that they would die. I know they will succumb'. There was 'no question' in his mind that the four had died of AIDS. In one, it had been carditis, that refused to clear up with the most uptodate antibiotics. When I questioned whether that was an AIDSdefining illness, and asked him about the other deaths, Father D'Agostino grew angry and told me they died of HIV, and he was a doctor, and I had no right to question his clinical judgement.

D'Agostino told me he had come under a lot of pressure locally, in particular through medical channels, and I do not know what other pressures he had to bear. But they could hardly have been more intense than those that befell the Krynens after my article about their changed vision of AIDS in Africa. The European Community's AIDS Task Force, which had previously made a star of Philippe Krynen, now disowned him and cancelled a promise of funding for Partage. There were even attempts to have the couple thrown out of the country. They were also invited to ecant, and condemn the Sunday Times, as in a letter received from Dr. Angus Nicoll, consultant epidemiologist with Britain's Public Health Laboratory Service, who inquired through Partage's headquarters in France:

Further to my communication of December 20th I have been sent the attached letter and press release by Father D'Agostino in Kenya. As you will read they are complaining of some misrepresentation by the Sunday Times and are asking that the newspaper convey Dr. D'Agostino's views. I also attach a copy of the original article . . . After reading these letters I wondered whether Mr. and Mrs. Krynen had been fully happy with their coverage and had had any experience like Dr D'Agostino in trying to make a correction?

Philippe Krynen told me that he received the same letter again in January. The answer suggested by such an amazing approach, he said though he did not actually send it was 'questions put by the police are only answered in the presence of our lawyer'. In fact, he stood by and continues to stand by every word in our article.

In February 1994, the Journal of Infectious Diseases published the results of a study conducted in Kinshasa, Zaire, to try to establish whether HIV infection was associated with leprosy. About 70% of 57 leprosy patients, and 30% of a group of 39 contacts, tested positive according to two leading versions of ELISA. But after laboratory investigations, it was found that proteins from the leprosy agent were causing crossreactions with the 'HIV' test. When this was taken into account, the researchers concluded that in fact only two of the leprosy patients, and none of the contacts, were HIVinfected. Testing with Western Blot was even more misleading. It gave a positive reaction in 85% of the patients who were negative with the other tests. The authors, who included Harvard's Dr. Max Essex, one of the originators of the theory that HIV originated in Africa, pointed out that the microbe responsible for tuberculosis is in the same family of mycobacterial agents. They concluded that ELISA and Western Blot tests 'may not be sufficient for HIV diagnosis in AIDSendemic areas of central Africa where prevalence of mycobacterial diseases is quite high'.

These findings are exactly in line with the Krynens' observations, with what Father D'Agostino originally allowed himself to see, and with the Eleopulos paper in Bio/Technology. They go to the root of the bad science that has misled so many into believing Africa is in the grip of an epidemic of 'HIV disease'. The disease is in the minds of the scientists responsible for creating this monumental blunder, and for perpetuating it with campaigns to discredit those who have sought to offer an alternative perspective

'AIDS' in Africa is a collection of illnesses, some well known, others perhaps yet to be identified, brought together under an artificial umbrella by their shared ability to cause millions to give a positive result in what has come to be known as the HIV test.

As Professor P.A.K. Addy, head of clinical microbiology at the University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, Ghana, told New African magazine: 'I've known for a long time that AIDS is not a crisis in Africa as the world is being made to understand. But in Africa it is very difficult to stick your neck out and say certain things. The West came out with those frightening statistics on AIDS in Africa because it was unaware of certain social and clinical conditions. In most of Africa, infectious diseases, particularly parasitic infections, are common. And there are other conditions that can easily compromise or affect one's immune system.

'The diagnosis itself, merely being told you have AIDS, is enough to kill, and is killing people'.

I salute the Krynens, and others like them in Africa and elsewhere, who have been prepared to risk everything for the sake of telling the truth as they see it. *