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Mexican Government Blames W.H.O. For Their Country Being Filthy



May 1, 2009 9 Comments ›› Erik Wong

Mexico Swine Flu

A couple of months ago, Mexico was happy as a pig in (Get it?) with just it’s Civil Drug War compared to how it is now. Now because it is obviously impossible for a Government to screw up that much(…), Mexican Officials are turning the tide of blame and pointing their fingers towards the World Health Organization. It was obviously the W.H.O.’s fault for making sure that Mexico wasn’t a sanitary country. It was blatantly negligent in it’s regulations towards our poor southern neighbors when it overlooked that human-dwelling viruses could cultivate in -dwelling livestock (talking about the pigs of course), and Mexico is ready to stand up and do whatever it takes to not shoulder the blame of it’s own sanitary follies. The real question here folks is this: W.H.O. is really to blame? Chuckle.

MEXICO CITY – Mexico’s chief epidemiologist said the World Health Organization was slow to respond to the country’s warning about a health crisis that turned into a global swine flu scare and he wants an investigation.

Dr. Miguel Angel Lezana told The Associated Press late Thursday his center alerted the Pan American Health Organization on April 16 about alarming occurrences of flu and atypical pneumonia in Mexico. But no action was taken until eight days later when the World Health Organization said it was “very, very concerned” the outbreak could grow into a pandemic.

“It seems it should have been more immediate,” Lezana, director of the National Epidemiology Center, told AP in a telephone interview.

Across the country’s border, the number of confirmed swine flu cases in the United States rose to 130 Thursday. Hundreds of schools nationwide shut their doors. The only confirmed U.S. swine flu death so far was a Mexican toddler who succumbed in Texas. New cases were confirmed Thursday in Europe, but no deaths had been reported outside North America.

In Mexico, the outbreak’s epicenter, new cases and the death rate were leveling off, the country’s top medical officer said. Health authorities said they have confirmed 300 swine flu cases and 12 deaths due to the virus.

“The fact that we have a stabilization in the daily numbers, even a drop, makes us optimistic,” Mexican Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova said. “Because what we’d expect is geometric or exponential growth. And that hasn’t been the situation.”

But as Mexico shut down nonessential government and private business Friday to begin a five-day break aimed at further slowing the spread of the virus, the country’s epidemiology chief faulted WHO and its regional branch, PAHO, for not stepping in earlier.

Lezana said that after a rash of flu and pneumonia cases emerged in Mexico in April, his department was so alarmed that it notified by e-mail the local office of PAHO, as called for by international protocols.

“The procedure is very clearly established,” Lezana said. “You have to notify the local office, then it sends the notification to the regional office. They analyze the data and decide whether to send it to the WHO in Geneva.”

Lezana said the illnesses raised a red flag because the flu was occurring at least a month after flu season normally ends in Mexico.

But four days later, PAHO still had not responded, so the National Epidemiology Center again contacted the local PAHO office and asked for an explanation and whether more information was needed, Lezana said.

PAHO responded that the alert was being handled, he said. But Lezana said that as far as he knew, the PAHO regional office in Washington and WHO took no action until April 24, when WHO announced an epidemic was under way.

Lezana had learned just the day before, from a testing of a sample that Mexico sent to a lab in Canada, that people were coming down with a new, mutated and lethal swine flu virus. By then, more than 1,000 people had been sickened in Mexico.

Lezana told AP that to prevent delays in the future, there should be an investigation of the WHO’s handling of the crisis, adding that the public health agency should decide whether it should be an internal or an independent probe.

WHO has not commented publicly on the alleged delay. But PAHO spokesman Daniel Epstein confirmed to The Washington Post that the agency got a message from Mexican authorities on April 16 about an unusual disease outbreak.

Epstein, who is with PAHO’s Washington office, told the newspaper that it was impossible for authorities in Geneva not to have learned of it at the same time, describing a system that sends messages through to WHO headquarters automatically.

But Lezana said his alert was sent only to the PAHO office in Mexico City, not to Geneva.

There is a perception that Mexico was slow to react to the outbreak, and Lezana denied it.

“We didn’t wait. We notified them in time of this event,” he said, adding that while Mexico waited for WHO to assist, it tried to stem the outbreak and identify it.

Mexican medical teams did do some detective work that epidemiologists recommend for tracking a killer bug, including interviewing 472 people who may have come into contact with the first known swine flu fatality, Adela Maria Gutierrez, a 39-year-old from Oaxaca. Samples were taken from her and sent to the lab in Canada.

But only 18 people—all hospital workers—of the 472 people were tested for swine flu. In other parts of Mexico, the follow-up appears to have been weak. Health workers only started visiting the families of victims this week to see if they also contracted the illness.

Switzerland and the Netherlands became the latest countries to report infections. Canada, New Zealand, Britain, Germany, Spain, Israel and Austria also have confirmed cases.

The Red Cross said it was readying an army of 60 million volunteers who could be deployed around the world to help slow the virus’ spread.

The impact was most evident in Mexico City. Traffic cleared in the notoriously clogged avenues, and the attorney general’s office said crime was down one-third compared with last week. Mexico City’s infamous smog dropped to levels normally seen only on holidays.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon said authorities would use the extensive shutdown beginning Friday to consider whether to extend emergency measures or ease some restrictions. The five days include Friday’s Labor Day holiday, the weekend, and the Cinco de Mayo observance on Monday, minimizing the disruption. (AP)


  • David

    It’s George W. Bush’s fault!
    Economy in a tailspin? It’s George W. Bush’s fault!
    Stock prices falling? It’s George W. Bush’s fault!
    Car makers failing? It’s George W. Bush’s fault!
    Banks failing? It’s George W. Bush’s fault!
    Get a paper cut? It’s George W. Bush’s fault!

    But keep us safe for 8 years? Thank you obama and congress!

    • brovato

      :arrow: David
      don’t forget about the swine flu? It’s George W Bush’s fault!

      the usurper and the usurper congress will save the day :mrgreen:

    • Ivan the Kafir

      And Hitler had his Jews to blame for everything.

  • Mrs. Scoot

    That’s right they blame everyone else but themselves for the disease. That is the state of our world right now. They blame us for all the drugs that cross the border, among other things. Didn’t we win a revolution against tyranny? Well, why the hell can’t they?

  • CBL

    I was reading an article right after this starting blowing up about the rest of the world blaming american travelers for spreading it……..wow how I love being the scapegoat for the planet.

  • Steve Rogers

    :arrow: Mrs. Scoot & CBL
    Their own elites maintain power by blaming the U.S. The whole system is built on anger and envy directed towards us. Check out a short story called, “And the Rock Cried Out” by Ray Bradbury.

  • BTJoe112

    What a backward country. You still can’t drink the water there, Hey asshole’s it’s 2009. Inject chlorine into your water supply already. fuck it is not rocket science.

  • ROB (FLINT89)

    No, you’re country is filthy because you’re poor as shit. Why the hell do you think millions of your own people come to America to live a better life by selling oranges for 25c on the side of the road? I mean if making $5 a day here is a better life than living in Mexico, that’s saying something.

  • Ivan the Kafir

    Poor, dirty, uneducated…that’s what you get from a couple hundred years of civil and political unrest. No surprise then that Mexican farmers take a shit in the very fields which they cultivate vegetables in. Then we get sick. They don’t because they’ve been doing it for so long and don’t think twice about doing it. To them, the saying “eat shit and die!” is no joke. Shit is all many of them have to eat and if they DIDn’t eat it, they WOULD die.