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AFP
03 June, 2015, 08:51
Update: 03 June, 2015, 08:51
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US military confirms more anthrax blunders

AFP
03 June, 2015, 08:51
Update: 03 June, 2015, 08:51
The Dugway Proving Ground on 28 May 2015 in Utah. Photo: AFP

Washington: A US Army lab sent a live sample of anthrax to Canada by mistake and may have sent the deadly bacteria to the Pentagon’s police force as well, officials said Tuesday.

The latest discoveries raised fresh questions about the Defense Department’s handling of the lethal material and the extent of the problem involving mistaken shipments of anthrax.

As a spate of embarrassing details emerged over the past week, defense officials acknowledged it was unclear how many government or commercial labs could have received the vials.

‘We can confirm that yesterday we determined that we had shipped anthrax to Canada,’ Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven Warren said.

The sample came from a larger batch or ‘master sample’ that tested as ‘live,’ he said.

The live anthrax sample was sent to a lab in Alberta province, a defense official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The material had been irradiated at the US Army’s Dugway Proving Ground in Utah, but for some reason the bacteria was not rendered inactive as intended.

Authorities also are testing anthrax samples from the Utah lab that were sent to the Pentagon Force Protection Agency, which guards the Defense Department, officials said.

The samples, which were supposed to be inactive, were to be used to help test gear designed to detect biological or chemical agents.

Officials said the samples are being tested in a laboratory near the main Pentagon building just outside Washington, which serves as the headquarters for the US military.

The Pentagon has already admitted to blunders that include live anthrax spores being shipped to laboratories across the United States as well as to Australia and South Korea.

Two other batches of live anthrax have been found at Dugway Proving Ground.

Samples from that material have been transported to at least 28 labs in at least 12 US states. And officials said that the number is likely to go up as an internal inquiry progresses.

As a precaution, 27 people were receiving preventative medical treatment, including 22 military and civilian personnel at Osan Air Base in South Korea.

But US officials said there was no threat posed to public health and no suspected cases of infection. And the vials sent out with samples contained such small amounts of anthrax bacteria that even if ingested, it would not prove lethal, officials said.

 

Pentagon investigation

Last week, the Pentagon announced a 30-day investigation to get to the root of the problem and to examine protocols at all military labs handling anthrax. The probe is being led by Frank Kendall, undersecretary of defence for acquisition, technology and logistics.

The inquiry will look at whether the irradiation process used to inactivate anthrax bacteria was inherently flawed or whether human error was to blame.

If a technical glitch is the cause, then other army labs could be implicated and the scope of the problem would extend beyond the Dugway Proving Ground facility.

The lab in Utah routinely transfers ‘dead’ anthrax samples for scientific research and the lab had been working on a project to detect biological threats in the field.

As a precaution, the Defence Department has stopped anthrax shipments pending the investigation.

Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland and other lawmakers have expressed outrage at the revelations about the mistaken shipments.

In a letter to Pentagon chief Ashton Carter and Centres for Disease Control and Prevention head Thomas Frieden, Mikulski said she had ‘serious concerns about how such a potentially catastrophic mistake could have been made.’

Microscopic anthrax spores can be released without being detected and can be placed in powders or food.

In 2001, powdered anthrax spores were found in letters mailed in the United States. Out of 22 people who were infected, five died.

Anthrax spores are deadly unless a patient is promptly treated with large doses of antibiotics.

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