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Canadians 'Vulnerable'
to Bioterror Weapons
Authorities are ill-equipped
to handle an attack, federal documents warn
By Mark MacKinnon
Friday,
April 27, 2001 - The Globe and Mail, Print Edition, Page A1
Health Canada
is unprepared to deal with what the Canadian Security Intelligence
Service sees as the growing threat of a "mass-casualty"
chemical - or biological-weapons strike in this country, internal
documents suggest.
Since a series of chemical weapons "hoaxes"
earlier this year - including an incident where a box containing
a mysterious blue powder was received at the Immigration Department
in Ottawa, forcing the evacuation of the building - experts have
warned that Canada is ill-equipped to handle such an attack if the
real thing were ever to come along.
The Health Canada documents, obtained by
the Globe and Mail, accepted by the department as well-founded,
though the department felt the risk of a bioterrorism attack "remains
remote."
In an interview yesterday, Ronald St. John,
executive director of health Canada's Centre for Emergency Preparedness
and Response, said the situation is imperfect, but has improved
since last year when the documents were prepared.
"The statements that were made a year
ago aren't quite appropriate today," Dr. St.John said.
However, Dr. St. John acknowledged there's
still a lot of work to do. "It wouldn't be fair to say it's
fixed. The entire network hasn't been put into place yet."
Even if it were, he said, "you're always going to have a limited
capacity at the local level" to respond to a large scale terrorist
attack.
"It's possible for somebody to devise
something that will overwhelm anything. But we don't prepare for
Armageddon."
The documents say the United States, Britain
and Australia have all taken steps to prepare for the medical catastrophe
of a bioterrorism attack, but as of a year ago, Canada has devoted
no resources and no personnel to readying itself for a terrorist
strike.
"Canada is vulnerable to a BT [bioterrorist]
attack with either chemical or biological agents," one document,
dated January, 2000, reads. "Currently, no funds are earmarked
for dealing with BT activities at health Canada."
A chemical - or biological-weapons attack
in Canada would be disastrous, according to modelling done by the
Laboratory Centre for Disease Control.
Using the Ottawa suburb of Nepean, Ont.,
as an example, the LCDC found that if its 100,000 residents were
exposed to the chemical agent anthrax, 32,875 would die. Medical
costs from the resulting 332,5000 days of hospital care would total
$6.5-billion.
If botulism were the agent used, and the
same number exposed, it's estimated that 30,000 would die and it
would cost $8.6-billion to keep in hospital the others affected
for the needed 4,275,000 days.
In contrast to Canada's lack of preparedness,
the documents say, the United States devoted $158-million (U.S.)
in fiscal 1999 to prepare for possible bioterrorism strikes, giving
the bulk of the money to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The documents show there was a debate last
year within Health Canada over the need for dedicated funding.
Two options were presented to a multidepartment
committee studying the issue.
One was the status quo; the other an undefined
amount of money that would qualify as "sufficient funding."
Among the needed steps identified were the
stockpiling of vaccines and other medicines, and training of doctors
to recognize illnesses such as anthrax and smallpox.
The national emergency response centre needed
"expansion and refurbishment" and an enhanced communications
system was needed, the documents say.
"Currently there is a 'vacuum,' i.e.,
no one is taking (national) leadership for public health aspects
of BT; anything that is done is likely better than the current situation,"
one reads.
"Our provincial and federal laboratory
capacity is inadequate and unable to carry out rapid diagnosis of
a biological attack' If an episode of any size were to occur today,
Health Canada's ability to support local responses would be quickly
overwhelmed." Preparedness varied at the local level city by
city, one report noted.
The documents quote from a "CSIS Report
2000/02" in outlining the growing risk of a bioterrorism attack.
"Canada remains as vulnerable as any
of the other Western industrialized states to the kind of nightmarish,
mass-casualty CBRN - chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear
- terrorist attack that until recently was confined to fiction,"
it says.
"Although it is impossible to estimate
the precise likelihood of a mass-casualty terrorist attack using
CBRN materials... it appears to be a case of not if, but when, the
next such event will occur."
Dr. St. John said Canada has dramatically
improved its diagnostic capabilities and has been working with municipalities,
provinces and other countries to ensure preparedness.
A network of laboratories that could deal
with a chemical or biological attack is also being put into place,
with Winnipeg's Centre for Emergency Preparedness and Response as
the hub. Canada is also further along in the stockpiling of medicines
and vaccines, he said.
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