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Medicine

WHO Says It Advised Ukraine To Destroy Pathogens In Health Labs To Prevent Disease Spread (reuters.com) 204

The World Health Organization advised Ukraine to destroy high-threat pathogens housed in the country's public health laboratories to prevent "any potential spills" that would spread disease among the population, the agency told Reuters on Thursday. From the report: Biosecurity experts say Russia's movement of troops into Ukraine and bombardment of its cities have raised the risk of an escape of disease-causing pathogens, should any of those facilities be damaged. Like many other countries, Ukraine has public health laboratories researching how to mitigate the threats of dangerous diseases affecting both animals and humans including, most recently, COVID-19. Its labs have received support from the United States, the European Union and the WHO.

In response to questions from Reuters about its work with Ukraine ahead of and during Russia's invasion, the WHO said in an email that it has collaborated with Ukrainian public health labs for several years to promote security practices that help prevent "accidental or deliberate release of pathogens." "As part of this work, WHO has strongly recommended to the Ministry of Health in Ukraine and other responsible bodies to destroy high-threat pathogens to prevent any potential spills," the WHO, a United Nations agency, said. The WHO would not say when it had made the recommendation nor did it provide specifics about the kinds of pathogens or toxins housed in Ukraine's laboratories. The agency also did not answer questions about whether its recommendations were followed.
On Wednesday, Russian's foreign ministry claimed that the U.S. operates a biowarfare lab in Ukraine, "an accusation that has been repeatedly denied by Washington and Kyiv," reports Reuters. A spokesperson for the ministry went on to claim that Russian forces unearthed documents in Ukraine that showed "an emergency attempt to erase evidence of military biological programs" by destroying lab samples.

Not only has Ukraine denied these allegations, Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby called them "laughable" and suggested Moscow could be laying the groundwork to use a chemical or biological weapon.
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WHO Says It Advised Ukraine To Destroy Pathogens In Health Labs To Prevent Disease Spread

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  • Nuclear power plants leaks and those should cancel out, radiation killing the pathogens /s

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      There are no nuclear power plant leaks. None of the buildings in the Chernobyl attack had anything to do with nuclear power, the dome is intact and although the workers are in desperate conditions (which raises the risk of accidental releases), there's no actual power generation going on so any release will be very local.

      • There are no nuclear power plant leaks.

        Chernobyl is not the only nuclear power plant in Ukraine. I don't know that the other ones are leaking after Russian attacks, but then you don't know that they aren't. There are plenty of radioactive materials in Chernobyl so an accidental strike and fire could easily lead to nuclear materials being dispersed, though almost certainly not an actual melt-down.

        • by jd ( 1658 )

          We know they're not leaking into the atmosphere. The global network of sensors for detecting radioactive particles is extremely good.

          • by macker ( 53429 )

            We know they're not leaking into the atmosphere. The global network of sensors for detecting radioactive particles is extremely good.

            Except when they lose power, as the ones in and around the Chernobyl have, thanks to Putin's Pirates.

            No power, no sensors, no communications with the "global network".

            So how, exactly, do we "know they're not leaking" ?

            • that is now how it works, the global network of sensors are not placed in Ukraine, they are placed in every single country and detects radioactive material in the air. This is e.g how the accident in Chernobyl was first detected in Sweden and Finland long before USSR acknowledged that there where any problems.
      • In Zaporizhzhia the fuel cooling basin was hit. In Chernobyl the power supply for the cooling basin was interrupted. In Charkiv the Physics Institute of the university was hit, which operates a research reactor.
      • there's no actual power generation going on so any release will be very local.

        Correct me if I'm wrong please, but my understanding is that the fuel cooling pool is not beneath the sarcophagus and so if water levels in the pool fall enough to partially expose the rods, there is risk that they will burn and material will be put into the atmosphere. I'm reading articles that say it will take 40 days for the pool to "dry out" but because they're not every technical sadly they don't tell me whether that means to expose the fuel, or completely dry out.

        • by jd ( 1658 )

          There's a chance of a relatively local fire. It'll hurl heavier material over some distance, probably over the entire exclusion zone and maybe a bit further, but the circumstances in the Chernobyl reactor disaster (in which the radioactive cloud circled the world three times) won't happen again.

          With the disaster, I was personally measuring uranium in rainwater in England. (The local reactors only dump the uranium into the seas.) I cannot think of a catastrophe that would result in me doing so again.

          Let's ta

          • Thanks. Do you have any insight on what fraction of 40 days is relevant? Seems like plenty of time to get things back up and going if it's any significant portion of it. Or if the 40 days number is bullshit for that matter

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • false flag (Score:5, Insightful)

    by antus ( 6211764 ) on Friday March 11, 2022 @05:19AM (#62346881)
    We know at this point that anything that Russia accuses anyone else of doing, they are actually doing themselves. Anything they say they wont do, they are in the process of considering doing themselves in the near future.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      They have form on this. Accuse another country they are invading of having chemical weapons, then deploy their own chemical weapons.

      At this point it's a near certainly that they are about to commit another war crime (using chemical weapons) in Ukraine.

      • At this point it's a near certainly that they are about to commit another war crime (using chemical weapons) in Ukraine.

        This is how Russia "helped" gas people in Syria but Syria didn't even bother with a pretext.

        I hope countries are sending Ukraine a lot of equipment for dealing with chemical warfare.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      They learned that from the Orange Shitgibbon. They also learned from him that if you throw your feces about like our simian cousins, some of it will stick to the walls.

      • Actually, no. This is how Russia has operated for decades. I would venture to say they both of them learned it from Joseph Goebbels.

    • We know at this point that anything that Russia accuses anyone else of doing, they are actually doing themselves.

      What? Russia would never invade Ukraine, that's silly. Err-*checks date* I mean Russia would never unleash biological agents in Ukraine, that's silly.

    • is he'll go and accuse you of projecting. Just like a liar will defend himself by calling you a liar.

      But people will believe what they want to believe. It was easy to believe the worst of Saddam, because he was awful, and his having secret WMDs would have been perfectly in character. But...
    • by jd ( 1658 )

      I suspect you may well turn out to be right there. The problem is, many other countries do precisely the same. Until it is illegal for a government to use disinformation as a weapon (it is, after all, a weapon used by a military commander specifically and intentionally against civilians) and there is a means to enforce such a prohibition on any country whether they sign up to that international court or not, there's nothing that can be done about it. "Truthiness", information warfare and disinformation camp

  • by JKanoock ( 6228864 ) on Friday March 11, 2022 @08:24AM (#62347269)
    Most developed countries with a decent health department have some sort of facility like this. What's next, "we found americium-241 hiding in their smoke alarms, they are definitely developing nuclear weapons, we must strike first!"
  • Wouldn't it be funny if a dangerous pathogen escaped this lab and then the Trumpkins started spreading conspiracy theories that the release actually came from a live animal market to divert fault from Trump's dom daddy...

    • China already is spreading the rumor that COVID escaped from a lab in the US where they were doing illegal research.

  • Just to confirm, are we trusting WHO today ?

  • by gnasher719 ( 869701 ) on Friday March 11, 2022 @11:27AM (#62347883)
    That has been explained on another website, and it's just normal common sense procedure: There are lots of things that are a health risk, so you get a bit of disinfectant or bleach and clean up everything. Recommended not only to the Ukraine, but to any country with a bit of desire for cleanliness.

    Note that bleach and most disinfectants shouldn't be applied internally, Mr. Trump & Republicans.
  • Still can't post a comment with three dots though.

Aren't you glad you're not getting all the government you pay for now?

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