UM MALARIA LAB CHIEF PAKISTAN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00806R000201140092-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 30, 2010
Sequence Number: 
92
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 9, 1982
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00806R000201140092-2.pdf116.12 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/30: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201140092-2 STAT -" ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE THE Si '1 9 Februa r 1982 malario a I b chic J rakista-h Mosquito research drew. Soviet attack By John Schidlovsky New Delhi Bureau of The Sun New Delhi-Pakistan has forced the director of a University of., Maryland anti-malaria laboratory to leave the country. - Dr. David R. Nalin, a Baltimore- an who has been director of 'the Uni- a-versity of Maryland International Center for Medical Research in La- -.bore, Pakistan, since late 1979; left 11 :Pakistan at the end of last- month ! 11 when the government-which helps 'j his visa. The laboratory has been accused by the Soviet Union of breeding dan- gerous "CIA mosquitoes." In _ New Delhi .: yesterday, Dr. Nalin said his forced departure was the work of an orchestrated cam- paign fueled by Moscow sympathiz- e rs. However, Dr. John R. Dennis. the dean of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, said in a tele phone interview from his Baltimore- ::office- that, "the Pakistani govern- ment did not want to renew his visa If because of his dealings with Paki- I stani employees. And, U.S. AID [the Agency for International Develop- ment, which also helps finance the 'laboratory's work] thought be was running around behind their backs According to Dr- Dennis, Dr. Nalin made contact with several Pakistani officials, outside the nor- mal channels, in an attempt to ob- tain the renewal. - Dr. Dennis-said Pakistani offi- . cials had promised Dr. Nalin a lim ited visa sometime in the future, to l enable him to return to finish part of his work. - Both Dr Nat?r -A "- ,,.,...:. come under sharp attack by the Sovi- et media, which have sought to por- tray the facility as a tool of American espionage. .:4 But Dr. Dennis yesterday. seemed to disagree with Dr. Nalin's assertion that he was the victim of a Soviet dis- information campaign. "I think he might be making too much of this." ' - The University of Maryland and the government of Pakistan have run the laboratory since 1962.. Scientists at the 130-employee installation have done extensive work on malaria re- search and have produced a stock of 20,000 mosquitoes -including geneti- cally altered strains-=for, experi- ments. Last week, the Soviet weekly Lit- erary Gazette charged that the lab was creating new strains of "killer mosquitoes" that would be used by' the Central - Intelligence Agency operatives to spread diseases into Cuba and Afghanistan. . The report, as reproduced by one Indian newspaper, stated: "Poisoners from overseas plot to infect cattle with viruses, and then use the season- al migration of herds from Pakistan to Afghanistan to start an epidemic of .encephalitis in Afghanistan." The Soviet report went on to blame "recent epidemics in Cuba" on the Lahore-bred mosquitoes.. Last year, Cuba charged that the CIA was responsible for introducing ?dengue fever-a mosquito-borne dis- ease-into that country. Dr. Nalin and Dr. Dennis' denied the Soviet charges. "I think the Soviets are always going to try-to discredit us," said Dr.- Dennis. The dean, who was in Lahore last month to visit the anti-malaria lab, said he did not believe the Soviet { .charges would threaten the future of the lab. He said Dr. Nalin would probably be replaced in Lahore by Dr. Richard Baker, who is now head. of the De- partment of International Medicine at.the university and who worked pre-. in Pakistan: _ ....~ ~..~a.e: Sanitized Copy Approved for Release Dr. Dennis said the University of Maryland will find' out this month whether the anti-malaria lab will re- ceive full funding from AID. The uni- versity has applied'for $5 million to help keep the lab open for the next five years. In describing his 27 months in La- bore, however, Dr. Nalin said yester- day that he doubted whether the Bal- timore-based lab would be able to survive what he described as Soviet- backed attempts to, undermine the work." He said the campaign against the lab has been led by two former Paki- stani empioyees-Dr. M. Aslam Khan, a geneticist, and N. A. K. Chaudhry, an administrative officer. Each of them had been dismissed, but continued trying to sabotage the lab's research work, Dr. Nalin claimed. = Among the- tactics allegedly used .by opponents of.?the- lab, Dr. Nalin s aid, were: = ? Spreading a rumor that 22 pa- tients at the lab's clinic near Lahore- had been killed by American medica- tion. y ~ ? Sending a letter to his office- threatening his life: _ ? Bribing patients to say that they . had suffered adverse drug reactions, to medication given at the clinic. Onei ? Telling Pakistani villagers that laboratory officials were suppressing information about a:-supposed out- break of yellow fever. In fact, no such Dr. Nalin.. said ;that in early December, he walked into his secre-. th ou h fil - g waging Nalin asked the.man who he was, the stranger produced ..-a , visiting card ?, identifying himself. as Iona Andronovi a Moscow-based correspondent for. the Literary Gazette. _:.?.. WJVV7VVVM 2010/07/30: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201140092-2