A Muslim Conspiracy Theory Keeps Polio Alive (FrontPageMagazine.com) By Daniel Pipes 05/24/05)
Source: http://www.frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=18166
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A worldwide campaign begun in 1988 to eradicate the polio infection
was on the verge of success when, early in 2003, a conspiracy theory
took hold of the Muslim population in northern Nigeria. That
conspiracy theory has single-handedly returned polio to epidemic
proportions.
The theory’s source seems to be one Ibrahim Datti Ahmed, 68, a
physician and president of Nigeria’s Supreme Council for Shari’a Law.
Ahmed, an Islamist, accuses Americans of lacing the vaccine with an
anti-fertility agent that sterilizes children (or, in an alternate
theory, that infects them with AIDS) and considers them, according to
John Murphy of the Baltimore Sun, “the worst criminals on Earth …
Even Hitler was not as evil as that.”
This fear if polio vaccines caught on, explains a doctor with the
World Health Organization, because of the war in Iraq. “If America is
fighting people in the Middle East,” goes the Islamist logic, “the
conclusion is that they are fighting Muslims.” Local imams repeated
and spread the sterilization theory, which won wide acceptance
despite vocal assurances to the contrary from the WHO, the Nigerian
government, and many Nigerian doctors and scientists.
Ibrahim Shekarau, governor of Kano, one of the three Nigerian states
that refused the polio vaccine, justified the decision not to
vaccinate on the grounds that “it is a lesser of two evils to
sacrifice two, three, four, five, even ten children [to polio] than
allow hundreds of thousands or possibly millions of girl-children
likely to be rendered infertile.”
The Baltimore Sun offers the example of a young Nigerian mother who
rejected polio vaccine for her child. The child did get polio and the
mother was asked if she regretted her decision. Unhesitatingly, she
replied, “No, I would do the same [again].” Villagers saw the
vaccination program as a threat and on occasion “chased, threatened
and assaulted vaccinators. Frustrated, some vaccination teams dumped
thousands of doses of the vaccine rather than face angry villagers.”
By mid-2004 the conspiracy theory had jumped to India, where a health
worker noted that in one slum, “many poor and ignorant women regard
the anti-polio drops as a deceptive strategy to control the birth
rate.”
Such phobia about the West infecting Muslims with diseases is nothing
new. In a 1997 book, I surveyed some earlier accusations:
... the British imported cholera and malaria to Egypt after World War
II. A British midwife who trained in the Kabylia province of Algeria
got accused by his angry Algerian supervisor of working in league
with the “white-coated saboteurs passing their hands from vagina to
vagina, infecting my heroic people with syphilis!” An unnamed enemy—
presumably American—infiltrated deadly diseases into Iraq via maggot-
ridden cigarettes. Israel transmitted cancer to Palestinians by
getting them to take dangerous factory jobs or subjecting them to
phosphorous searches.
The polio-vaccine conspiracy theory has had direct consequences:
sixteen countries where polio had been eradicated have in recent
months reported outbreaks of the disease – twelve in Africa (Benin,
Botswana, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad,
Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Mali, Sudan, and Togo) and four in Asia
(India, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen). Yemen has had the
largest polio outbreak, with more than 83 cases since April. The WHO
calls this “a major epidemic.”
The common element, the New York Times notes, is that incidents of
polio are now located “almost exclusively in Muslim countries or
regions.” That’s because, scientists hypothesize, the polio infection
traveled from Nigeria in a uniquely Muslim way – via the pilgrimage
to Mecca (the hajj), which took place in January 2005. Testing
confirms that all three Asian strains of the disease originated in
northern Nigeria.
In response, the WHO is talking tough, as United Nations
organizations too rarely do, complaining that Muslim governments have
contributed a trivial US$3 million to the $4 billion anti-polio
campaign and demanding more funds from them. David L. Heymann of the
WHO also noted that “It would be a good sign for Islamic countries to
see other Islamic countries giving. But they’ve come in more slowly
than we expected.”
Additional money would help, yes, but more important is for Muslims
themselves to argue against and defeat the conspiracy-theory
mentality. This polio episode is but one example of how conspiracy
theories originating in the Muslim world damage everyone, and Muslims
first of all.
Mr. Pipes (www.DanielPipes.org) is director of the Middle East Forum
and author of Miniatures (Transaction Publishers). (©2005
FrontPageMagazine.com 05/24/05)
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