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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials
AMAT 225.18-1.5%Nov 18 3:59 PM EST

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To: Sam Citron who wrote (54356)10/20/2001 7:53:14 PM
From: michael97123  Read Replies (2) of 70976
 
RE CCL--see bolded

aturday October 20, 7:06 pm Eastern Time

Argentines cautious after anthrax confirmed

(UPDATE: Adds comment by Miami company paragraphs 12-13)

By Gilbert Le Gras

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Oct 20 (Reuters) - Dozens of people carrying letters wrapped in
plastic waited to be checked for anthrax infection at a Buenos Aires hospital on Saturday after authorities confirmed a letter sent
from Miami to a woman in the Argentine capital was laced with anthrax spores.

``Personally, I'm not afraid because I know it is something that can be cured
but I'm worried about the situation in the world,'' Daniel Fernandez told
Reuters on his way out of Muniz Hospital. He said about 100 people were
waiting to be checked.

Fernandez said he went for a check-up because he received a letter mailed
in Miami that bore the logo of a cruise line, similar to the letter received by
the woman that health authorities on Friday said carried anthrax spores.

He said there was no powdery substance in the letter he got about a month
ago.

Before Friday, Kenya was the only country outside the United States to
confirm the presence of the potentially deadly bacteria in a letter. That letter
was mailed in Atlanta.

Many Argentines fear their country, the only Latin American nation to send troops to the 1991 Gulf War and a strong ally of the
United States, could be a victim of attacks after the Sept. 11 suicide-hijack plane assaults on New York and Washington.

Ten people entered the Muniz Hospital, where the woman was given a clean bill of health on Friday, in the space of 15 minutes
carrying letters wrapped in plastic and another six left the hospital over the same time period. Hospital security refused to allow
any media access to the building.

NECESSARY MEASURES SAID TAKEN

``The Argentine government is on alert for your safety and is concerned, but the necessary measures have been taken to ensure
the integrity of our citizens,'' Interior Minister Ramon Mestre said after an emergency meeting of the Interior Security Council on
Saturday with all mail distributors operating in Argentina, public security agencies and airport operators.

News of the confirmation dominated reports in Latin America's third-largest economy, displacing coverage of an ongoing economic
crisis that has been one of the focal points of overall emerging market volatility in recent months.

The woman who received the letter in Buenos Aires did not open the envelope but sent it for tests and was believed not to be at
risk of infection, health authorities said. She was not named.

As of Friday more than 580 suspicious envelopes were handed over to the state-run Malbran Institute -- a leading medical
research center where Argentina's 1984 Nobel-prize winner Cesar Milstein once worked as chief of molecular biology.

Governments around the world have become increasingly fearful that anthrax smeared on letters is being used as a biological
weapon after some 40 people tested positive in the United States for exposure to the disease and one person died.

The head of intensive care at the Muniz Hospital, Jorge San Juan, told reporters on Friday that the envelope came from Miami and
was from the Carnival Cruise Line.
Health Minister Hector Lombardo later repeated that information on an investigative journalism
television program.

A spokeswoman for Miami-based Carnival Corp. (NYSE:CCL - news), the world's largest cruise group, said on Saturday her
company had not yet been contacted by Argentine authorities but that it appeared the contaminated envelope was mailed by a
package tour company whose promotional material included cruises with Carnival.
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