DAWN.COM

Today's Paper | May 04, 2024

Published 20 Jul, 2005 12:00am

Study blames Myanmar for AIDS spread

UNITED NATIONS: Heroin users and prostitutes in Myanmar have spread HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, through large parts of Asia, according to a Council on Foreign Relations study released on Monday.

The use of so-called genetic fingerprinting now allows scientists to identify changes in the evolution of the virus and thereby dispute accusations, such as the one Libya made against Bulgarian nurses, that one group or another was spreading the virus.

“With the exception of one serious outbreak in China, virtually all the strains of HIV now circulating in Asia — from Manipur, India, all the way to Vietnam, from mid-China all the way down to Indonesia, come from a single country,” Laurie Garrett, author of the 67-page report, told a news conference.

“Several research teams have proven that these various HIV strains can be tracked along four major routes, all originating in Burma,” she said.

The highest infection rates are among prostitutes and heroin users in Myanmar, ranked as the world’s top opium producer until 2003 when Afghanistan moved to first place.

“Burma is a failed state, rife with civil war and rival gangs of drug, gem and sex-slave smugglers,” said the report, entitled “HIV and National Security: Where Are The Links?”

Garrett said the new technology, known as molecular epidemiology, could prevent accusations of who spread the epidemic.

—Reuters

Read Comments

Pakistan's 'historic' lunar mission to be launched on Friday aboard China lunar probe Next Story