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To: Raymond Duray who wrote (23958)1/2/2005 12:24:10 AM
From: Henry Niman  Respond to of 110194
 
No, I was following the flu before the tsunami. The flu appears to be highly contagious and lethal.

recombinomics.com

Sri Lanka authorities said it was influenza B, but there are many unanswered questions

recombinomics.com

The flu would be a problem because of crowded conditions, which is why respiratory diseases and pneumonia are mentioned. WHO can handled outbreaks that are confined to affected areas.

Lethal contagious flu is quite another matter, which they didn't want to talk about before the tsunami and they definitely don't want to talk about it now.

They don't want to talk about 1933 human flu (WSN/33) in swine in Korea either

recombinomics.com

However, the viruses don't read press releases and care little about what the public is told.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (23958)1/2/2005 9:46:22 AM
From: Henry Niman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 110194
 
>>You are the only person I know of who is talking about influenza in the tsunami damaged regions. <<

Raymond,

Popular press is slow on the pick up. Here's the first article (came out today) I found on post-tsunami associated bird flu

telegraph.co.uk

Although comments were published earlier in China

flu.org.cn

which included comments I made earlier

recombinomics.com

My comments get into the popular press eventually. For tsunami driven flu it took several days.

It looks like it will take a month

recombinomics.com

on WSN/33

recombinomics.com

However, when the WSN/33 news comes out, WHO will look VERY bad because they have been questioned by many reporters and have delayed getting this story out.

The infections in swine in Korea with a 1933 human lab virus is still very real and spreading.

WHO just confuses the popular press, while the dangerous virus continues to infect swine in Korea.