In many ways, South African President Thabo Mbeki has been the darling
of the western community, in particular of the rulers in Washington.
He is urbane, intelligent, well-spoken. His views on economic reform
in his country strongly correspond to those of international finance,
and he has been instrumental in pushing through many economic policies
in the teeth of opposition from trade unions and those in his own party,
the African National Congress. His foreign policy, especially as it
relates to Sub-Saharan Africa, has also generally been such as to bring
smiles on Capitol Hill. For these reasons and others, mainstream press
in the West has been almost unanimous in awarding him kudos.
Yet in recent weeks this approbation has quite suddenly been withdrawn.
The international media has expressed not just scorn but distaste on
some of his pronouncements, and others have reacted in a near-hysterical
manner, threatening to boycott a major international conference that
is soon to be held in Durban. What explains this sudden shift in reaction
?
The issue at hand relates to one of the most pressing and urgent problems
in much of Sub-Saharan Africa today, the rapid and apparently uncontrollable
spread of AIDS. The proliferation of AIDS is most extensive and rapid
in countries like Zambia and South Africa, and this spread was aided
until recently by government inaction or inability to take even certain
minimal measures for its control. In addition, in this region it is
a disease transmitted primarily by heterosexual contact, unlike in the
West, so that the population at risk is far greater.
The current controversy relates to Mbeki's suggestion that the existence
of AIDS may not necessarily be related to the human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV). This is in fact a link which is currently taken
for granted by most of the scientific and medical establishment, and
forms the basis for almost all known treatment. If this link is unambiguous,
then South Africa's problems are already hair-raising. The government
estimates that an estimated 4.2 million of South African
have already contracted the HIV virus, with 1,700 people newly infected
every day. The Ministry Health has said the 10th
national antenatal HIV survey showed that on a national scale, 22 percent
of tested pregnant women were HIV positive.
On the basis of this evidence of HIV in South Africa
and other countries, some estimates project that several sub-Saharan
nations, including South Africa, will lose a quarter of their populations
to AIDS by 2010. According to some health specialists, the problem
of spread of infection is further compounded by the degree of denial
on the part of the government and fatalism on the part of the general
population, which have limited systematic efforts to contain the disease
in the same manner as in (for example) Thailand.
Mbeki's recent views have been strongly influenced by some dissident
US-based scientists who have been arguing for some time that there is
no conclusive evidence that the virus is the necessary or sufficient
cause of AIDS. The more prominent of these scientists is Dr.
Peter Duesberg, professor of molecular biology at the University of
California, Berkeley, and one of the world's leading experts on retroviruses.
Duesberg's credentials are impeccable. He is a member
of the National Academy of Sciences and a recipient of an Outstanding
Investigative Grant from the National Institutes of Health in 1985.
He was a candidate for the Nobel Prize for his work in discovering oncogenes,
thought to be a cause of cancer, in viruses. But he derailed his chances
of winning when he cautioned that his findings did not prove that there
were cancer genes in cells, as was popularly theorised at the time (and
is still an unproven theory).
In a number of papers published in scientific journals,
Duesberg has argued that HIV is too inactive, infects too few cells,
and is too difficult to even find in AIDS patients to be responsible.
And since the virus is notoriously difficult to isolate, antibody detection
has become the indicator of infection - something Duesberg protests
is highly inconsistent. When antibodies are dominant over a virtually
unfindable virus, this has always meant the immune system has triumphed
over the invader, not capitulated to it. Finally, there are many established
AIDS cases without any HIV, virus or antibody, further weakening the
hypothesis.
Faced with these findings, The Centers for Disease Control
of the USA dealt with the issue by changing the definition of what an
AIDS patient is to necessarily include HIV infections, so that most
descriptions are now routinely as HIV-AIDS. But hundreds of HIV-free,
certified AIDS cases surfaced again at the 1992 International Conference
on AIDS, and now are estimated to total over 4,000. At that point the
CDC changed the name of the disease. Duesberg contends that this semantic
play only further distracts from the likelihood that HIV does not cause
AIDS.
These views have been supported by other eminent scientists,
such as Kary Mullis, Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry and David Rasnick,
another expert in the area. However, the bulk of the scientific and
medical community is firmly aligned on the other side. Mbeki has instructed
the South African Health Ministry to set up a 20-member international
panel, including Duesberg and Rasnick, to test assumptions about the
disease. In response to criticism about their inclusion, he said that
"the matter is critical... The reason we are doing all of this
is to be able to respond correctly to what is reported to be a major
catastrophe on the African continent. You can't respond correctly by
closing your eyes and ears to any point of view. "
However, even a minority representation (2 out of 20,
after all) in such a committee seems too much for mainstream health
specialists to handle. Mbeki's interest in the dissident views has been
strongly criticised by the mainstream group, with many scientists going
to the extent of suggesting that President Clinton and other western
leaders should put pressure on him to conform to the current mainstream
position, and others threatening to boycott the international conference
on AIDS which will be held in South Africa in July this year.
Such reaction may have been what prompted the latest
salvo by the South African President, a highly emotional letter sent
on April 3, 2000 to various heads of state including Clinton and Koifi
Annan at the United Nations. Besides detailing the country's efforts
to battle the epidemic that has infected one in 10 South Africans, Mbeki
also defended South Africa's contacts with scientists who argue that
AIDS is not caused by HIV, and that AZT, a medication commonly used
to prevent transmission of HIV from pregnant mothers to their children,
does more harm than good.
"Not long ago, in our own country, people were killed,
tortured, imprisoned and prohibited from being quoted in private and
public because the established authority believed that their views were
dangerous and discredited. We are now being asked to do precisely the
same thing that the racist apartheid tyranny we opposed did, because
it is said, there exists a scientific view that is supported by the
majority, against which dissent is prohibited.''
Mbeki further argued that imposing a Western solution
to the "uniquely African catastrophe" of fast-spreading heterosexually
based AIDS transmission infection would be absurd. "Such a proceeding
would constitute a criminal betrayal of our responsibility to our own
people." His spokesman subsequently said that Mbeki sent the letter
"to explain his position because the reports that have been in
the media have either been misleading or inaccurate."
Clearly, this is not an issue that can be discussed meaningfully
by laypersons lacking the scientific background. What is interesting,
however, is the reaction in the international media, which is presumably
as ignorant as most of us are. These reactions have ranged from ridicule
to vilification, and are so extreme as to suggest that there may be
more to this than just a simple scientific dispute.
A significant issue in all of this of course is that
of drug provision. Medicine is at the heart of the problem for South
Africa, as for all developing nations. In the wealthy nations of the
West, "cocktails" of anti-retroviral drugs have made it possible
- at a cost per patient exceeding $10,000 a year - to live indefinitely
with HIV-AIDS. Obviously such cocktails are simply not affordable wither
by most South Africans, or by the public health system which at the
moment is having difficulty even ensuring the provision of relatively
cheap drugs to treat tuberculosis.
And one of the more significant aspects of the controversy
relates to certain drugs. There has been growing pressure on Mbeki to
provide AZT or Nevirapine, two drugs that have been found to be effective
in preventing mother-to-child transmission, through the public health
system. AZT in particular is among the cheaper of anti-HIV drugs, but
it would still impose a heavy burden on South Africa's fragile public
health system. Some activists have argued that Mbeki is trying to save
money by questioning its usefulness.
But there are also genuine debates about the effectiveness
of the drug. It basically reduces the risk of foetal transmission, but
it does not treat the actual patient, who may still die quite soon leaving
behind an orphan. There is growing fear about its level of toxicity,
especially among malnourished women (which is the norm among female
sufferers in South Africa). And some like Dr. Duesberg have argued that
it is actually one of the causes of AIDS transmission among adults,
rather than a prevention. However, the lobby of the pharmaceutical giant
that makes the drug is a strong one.
There have been other problems related to drugs that
treat some of the "opportunistic illnesses" that typcially
afflict AIDS sufferers and are the proximate cause of death in most
case. A common one in South Africa is cryptococcal meningitis. It can
be treated, but one of the key drugs - fluconazole, which also works
well against thrush, an extremely common ailment among HIV patients
- costs the equivalent of about $7.50 for a standard dose. Pharmaceutical
giant Pfizer holds the patent for fluconazole and sets the price in
almost every country.
In Thailand, the government (through a system of compulsory
licensing) permits local companies to make a generic form of the drug
fluconazole. As a result, the price for the same dose is only about
70 cents. In South Africa, however, a similar strategy has been beset
by difficulties. most significantly pressure from MNC drug companies
and their home governments, to avoid such practices.
Thus, despite the legality of compulsory licensing and
parallel imports, and despite the public health emergency enveloping
much of the developing world, the US has actively opposed developing
country efforts to implement compulsory licensing, parallel imports,
or other measures to make life-saving HIV/AIDS drugs more affordable
and available in their countries.
A report from the State Department says, "All relevant
agencies of the U.S. government-the Department of State together with
the Department of Commerce, its US Patent and Trademark Office, the
Office of the United States Trade Representative, the National Security
Council and the Office of the Vice President-have been engaged in an
assiduous, concerted campaign to persuade the government of South Africa
to withdraw or modify" the Medicines Act provisions that give the
government the authority to pursue compulsory licensing and parallel
import policies. The State Department report explains how "US government
agencies have been engaged in a full court press with South African
officials from the departments of Trade and Industry, Foreign Affairs,
and Health" to pressure them to change the law. US Vice President
Gore has raised the issue repeatedly Thabo Mbeki.
The United States has even withheld certain trade benefits
from South Africa and has threatened trade sanctions (by putting South
Africa on the "Special 301 Watch List" of countries receiving
heightened US scrutiny regarding trading practices) as punishment for
Pretoria's refusal to repeal those provisions of its Medicines Act that
offend the multinational drug companies. Washington has also enlisted
the French, Swiss, and German presidents to raise the issue with top
South African officials.
It is interesting that hardly any mainstream public health
specialists made any noise about this appalling attempt to prevent the
South African government from making what they see as life-saving anti-HIV
drugs affordable to a highly vulnerable population. In the circumstance,
it is difficult to accept, without a fairly liberal pinch of salt, that
the current outcry against the South African government is born entirely
as a result of international concern for the AIDS victims in that country,
and is not an orchestration by those who have a direct pecuniary interest
in there being no questioning of the way in which AIDS is currently
being handled.
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