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Get out your bed netsPaul Driessen / Eco-Imperialism -- Gulf Coast residents are slowly recovering from Katrina’s winds, floods, anarchy, and tardy local, state and federal disaster responses. Now they face yet another peril.Millions of acres of brackish, polluted water could become fertile breeding grounds for billions of mosquitoes. Some fear the hordes could infect survivors with West Nile virus and encephalitis – or even malaria and yellow fever. They point out that the United States had 2,500 serious cases and 100 deaths from WNV in 2004; that yellow fever killed 9,000 people in New Orleans and Memphis in the summer of 1878; and that malaria killed thousands of Americans every year until the 1940s. In 1999 three C-130 Hercules sprayed for 22 days in the wake of Hurricane Floyd. They killed 99% of all mosquitoes across 1.7 million acres in Virginia and North Carolina. This year’s program will be even more extensive. All three organizations decry the horrendous disease and death toll that malaria inflicts on African and other developing countries. In fact, nearly 450 MILLION Africans get malaria every year, and up to 2 million die. Half the victims are children. In Kenya, malaria claims 34,000 children a year; in Uganda, up to 50,000; Ethiopia: 75,000. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, it kills 225,000 children annually! The USAID, WHO and WB all give lip service to insecticides. But they almost never support, promote or fund the use of DDT or other insecticides. Instead, they emphasize insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) and new anti-malaria drugs. This supposedly underscores their “renewed assault on malaria” and a strategy that “has moved from words to action.” AID is also fostering net distribution, via partnerships with the private sector, and the Bank recently gave Congo $30 million to get “at least two” ITNs in each household. This, it says, “could slash child deaths by as much as one-fifth.” Two nets per household is hardly enough, especially when the entire family could be protected by programs that spray walls with tiny amounts of DDT just once or twice a year, to keep 90% of mosquitoes from even entering the home, killing any that land, and irritating the rest so they don’t bite. And a 20% reduction is unconscionably low, when DDT programs get four times that. South Africa used household DDT spraying, followed by ACT drugs, to slash malaria rates by 93% in three years. Its success inspired Mozambique, Zambia and other countries to institute similar programs. But the EU has threatened Uganda with sanctions on its agricultural goods, if it follows suit. USAID claims spraying won’t work because there aren’t enough trained sprayers, inadequate infrastructures prevent them from getting to villages, and “a high percentage of homes” must be treated if spraying is to be effective. This is simply false. Spraying isn’t rocket science. Training people and getting the job done once or twice a year is easier than getting bed nets and drugs to every parent and child. And spraying protects every person in every house that’s treated. Sleeping under a bed net is nearly impossible during torrid African nights, says Omololu Falobi, a journalist in Nigeria. Use the net anyway, and you get heat rashes all over your face and body. Most villages have no electricity to power fans or air conditioners, and many of the same environmentalists who oppose pesticides also oppose electricity generation on any scale that would power these cooling systems. Even in cities like Lagos power outages are frequent, rendering fans and AC useless. “Even if you have a generator,” says Falobi, “you don’t want to put it on throughout the night, for fear of carbon monoxide poisoning.” There is. But anti-pesticide activists and bureaucrats – safe in their malaria-free offices – refuse to consider them. Instead, they worry about trivial risks from pesticides – and ignore the devastation and death caused by diseases that pesticides could prevent. These are life-or-death decisions for malaria-endemic countries. Their health ministers must have the right to make decisions based on science and effective use of scarce human, medical and financial resources – without fear of reprisals if their decisions include DDT and other pesticides, along with nets, drugs and other measures. America would never tell hurricane survivors they must rely on bed nets and anti-malaria drugs that are in critically short supply, or simply don’t work. Telling Africans to do so violates their most basic human rights – to health, prosperity and life itself. Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Congress of Racial Equality and Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow, and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power ∙ Black death (www.Eco-Imperialism.com). |
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