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Wednesday, 28 December 2011

A fearless magician

Is Dr. Ron Fouchier’s forced mutation of the A(H5N1) bird flu virus inside a laboratory a dangerous experiment that shouldn’t have been conducted in the first place? The “new” virus can be transmitted via air from human to human, although the experiment used ferrets to demonstrate this, making it much more deadlier than its predecessor. This otherwise-fascinating property is lucrative to rogue states and terrorist organizations that may desire to exploit its pathogenic capacity for hubristic gains.

At the same time, Dr. Fouchier’s experiment finds important employ amongst his peers as well because it demonstrates the effects of specific mutations, how changes to the protein sequence affect the pathogenic capacity of the virus, and possible directions for future research. In the age of terrorism, thus, what bears more priority than the other: scientific research aimed at better understanding, recognizing and tackling pandemics before they occur? Or the possibility that such experiments could fall into the wrong hands and complicate an already precarious security situation?


[caption id="attachment_21062" align="aligncenter" width="250" caption="Dr. Ron Fouchier heads the virology lab at the Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam."][/caption]

Perhaps this is the only instance whereby precautionary measures can be disregarded in favour of going ahead with the experiment because, even though the conduction of the experiment in a dangerous environment can prove risky, it is not science’s obligation to back down in the face of threats posed by its findings. That terrorism raises such a question is as far as terrorism should be allowed to go, and upon consideration, it seems we must guard against terrorists by strengthening our armour, not halting the machinery that has made and still makes possible mankind’s progress.


However, the argument does not end there. One way or another, some responsibility does fall on the scientific community, especially the section that proposed to and did carry out this experiment, for the possibilities it has given rise to. In turn, this merits the question: was the experiment really necessary in the first place? When using experimental techniques to find newer solutions to old problems, solutions that are more progressive in terms of how many assumptions they make as part of the scientific method, researchers and those who fund them must be held accountable irrespective of a terrorist threat.

“It’s all about predicting what will hit you next. We want to predict earthquakes and tsunamis; we also want to predict what will happen with the bird flu virus,” Fouchier said about the killer-virus he’d created. “This work needed to be done.” For the moment, we must trust in the constructive tendencies of those who engineer our possibilities and not in the destructive tendencies of those who limit our choices. Terrorism is an integral aspect of the daily lives of men, women and children, and by stoppering scientific research, the best decision we will have taken is to secure our livelihoods for the present by persisting with caution and nothing else as defence.

Bill Brenner writes in CSO Online:
By mutating H5N1 into a more human threat, these scientists have given would-be bio terrorists something to salivate over. They say they did it because it could help them develop more effective vaccines in the future, but to me this falls into the category of things you just shouldn’t mess with, no matter how pure your intentions.

Why shouldn’t they mess with it? Yes, decisions cannot be made in a vacuum and scientists must pitch in with their bit to improve the situation around the globe, but to not do something just because it might fall into the wrong hands is the worst reason why it shouldn’t be done at all! If we don’t exercise our rights and also with it our powers to protect against risk, then we will have conceded defeat in a fight that, with each passing day, becomes a test of our resilience. The scientist may not be directly expected to pick up a gun and run to the front, but at the same time we must not expect that he will drop his tools and wait until the war is over.


[caption id="attachment_21063" align="aligncenter" width="450" caption="The H5N1, or bird flu, virus has devastated poultry populations across Asia since the mid-1990s. Even though it kills quickly when it takes hold of a human, it rarely every infects our species. Dr. Fouchier has changed that, however, although the specimen strain lies locked in a lab in Europe."][/caption]

The H5N1, or bird flu, virus has devastated poultry populations across Asia since the mid-1990s. Even though it kills quickly when it takes hold of a human, it rarely every infects our species. Dr. Fouchier has changed that, however, although the specimen strain lies locked in a lab in Europe.


Such research is not pushing the ambit of scientific ethics; if so insular a definition could be afforded, then almost all scientific research in microbiology, pathology and virology will have to be abandoned. Instead, the state must not hoist the responsibility of factoring in terrorist possibilities on the scientific community – unfair as it is – but must work with it to construct an environment in which science can work its magic fearlessly.

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