First one of his sons
died, then another and another. By 1996, Khalid al-Jabor had lost five children
to AIDS, all victims of contaminated blood allegedly exported to Iraq by a
French firm now owned by drug giant Sanofi.
Years later, the
58-year-old is still desperately trying to get justice for his shattered family
and more than 270 Iraqi families which suffered similar tragedies in the 1980s
and 1990s -- but to no avail, AFP reports.
"I believe that
human rights, freedom and democracy are imaginary principles, they don't really
exist," the tall, dapper, retired town hall employee said bitterly on a
trip to Paris, in another attempt to seek compensation.
The story emerged in the
early 1980s, when AIDS had just been discovered.
At the time, five of
Jabor's sons were haemophiliacs, a disorder in which blood does not clot
properly, forcing patients to have regular transfusions to replace the missing
clotting protein.
- Died alone -
All were given
transfusions in Baghdad using blood products that authorities say they bought
from the Mérieux Institute, which became part of Sanofi in 2004 when the drug
giant acquired Aventis.
With the realization as
early as 1982 that many haemophiliacs were contracting the HIV virus that
causes AIDS, concerns emerged worldwide about the safety of blood supplies and
scientists suspected non-heated products could be dangerous.
But Alain Bernal, spokesman
for Sanofi Pasteur -- the group's vaccine division that used to be Mérieux --
said there were fears that heating blood would damage the factor VIII protein
that helps clotting and is life-saving for haemophiliacs.
It was not until February
1985 that The Lancet medical journal published proof that heating blood did not
harm the protein.
But Mérieux only stopped
exporting non-heated batches to Iraq, Libya, Tunisia and others in November
that year.
Chairman Alain Mérieux
himself acknowledged the delay in an interview with AFP in 1992 when the
scandal erupted, saying the firm had spent those months developing an adequate
heating technique.
"In hindsight, I
think we reacted too slowly but in no way were there any doubts among employees
over the safety of the products," he said.
This all happened around
the same time as non-heated blood distributed by France's national transfusion
centre infected hundreds of people with HIV, later sparking a huge political
scandal.
For Jabor and his wife
though, the tragedy was relentless.
In 1983, four-year-old
Ali died of what at the time was a mysterious illness.
Then in 1986,
eight-year-old Walid died after developing the same symptoms. Several months
later, so did Bashar, seven.
Walid and Bashar had been
diagnosed with AIDS, which by then was well-known and feared the world over,
and they were quarantined in a Baghdad hospital until their death.
Both died alone.
"They were not allowed to see anyone and I didn't even have access to my
sons," Jabor said.
Khalid al-Jabor says five
of his sons were haemophiliacs who were all were given transfusions in Baghdad
©Bertrand Guay (AFP)
|
At the time of Saddam Hussein's
dictatorship, the health ministry informed the security services of the names
of each AIDS patient and Jabor feared they would take his two other affected
sons away.
"Police threatened
us, saying that if we didn't give them the children, they would write on our
house walls that our family had AIDS patients," he said.
Jabor initially hid his
son Haidar, but his health worsened and he was forced to take him to hospital
where he died in 1989, aged six.
As for Mohamed, he died
in 1996 and Jabor and his wife were left with just two children.
- Sanofi agrees to re-open talks -
According to Geraldine
Chavrier, the lawyer for the Iraqi families who has followed the story for a
decade, dozens of cases have been launched from several countries over the
years, to no avail.
She said all procedures
were faced "with the same difficulty" -- lack of evidence that
victims were transfused with blood from Mérieux.
"In countries where
this happened, there are no medical records, no sanitary traceability,"
she said.
Bernal told AFP that
Sanofi was ready to negotiate if those bringing the case "can demonstrate
that the person (who) suffered from haemophilia did not have AIDS before
(transfusions) and had AIDS after."
"We don't ask them
to demonstrate that it was a product from the Mérieux Institute that was
used."
As such, negotiations
have taken place but he declined to detail them for confidentiality reasons,
although he said a deal had been reached with Greek victims.
Chavrier pointed out that
Sanofi had inherited the problem in 2004.
"They are making an
effort by not demanding proof that is impossible to get, but they are asking
for a certain number of documents that are legitimate."
Sanofi has agreed to
re-open negotiations with Chavrier on behalf of Jabor and other Iraqi families.
And whatever the outcome,
Jabor himself has vowed to fight "until his last breath".
No comments:
Post a Comment