Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

New book links HIV to colonialism

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

New book links HIV to colonialism

HIV first appeared in southeastern Cameroon at a time when European colonialists

were establishing outposts. Picture: File

By KEVIN KELLEY (email the author)

Posted Saturday, March 3 2012 at 13:08

The global Aids epidemic can be seen as an outgrowth of European colonialism in

Africa, argues a new book co-authored by a Washington Post journalist and an

Aids researcher at Harvard University.

The strain of the human-immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that accounts for 99 per

cent of Aids deaths " appeared to have spread from a single explosion, a big bang

of the Aids epidemic " that originated in Cameroon about 100 years ago, the

authors write. " Powering the big bang was the burgeoning trade of colonial

Africa. "

d by porters who had been virtually enslaved by European colonisers, the

virus slowly made its way to the Belgian colonial capital called Leopoldville,

the book theorises. It describes that city, now known as Kinshasa, as " Ground

Zero " of an epidemic that has gone on to claim about 25 million lives.

From Kinshasa — which is today the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo —

one " subtype " of the killer HIV strain travelled east toward Lake

sometime in the 1960s, suggests Tinderbox: How the West Sparked the Aids

Epidemic and How the World Can Finally Overcome It.

Another subtype went south to Zambia, Botswana and South Africa. And a third

" hopped all the way across the ocean to Haiti, then to the United States and

Europe, " write Post reporter Craig Timberg and Harvard epidemiologist

Halperin.

Strong evidence shows that HIV first appeared in humans in southeastern Cameroon

in either the closing decades of the 19th century or the first two decades of

the 20th century, Timberg and Halperin say. They speculate that the transmission

from simian to human occurred when " a hunter caught an infected chimpanzee for

food, allowing the virus to pass from the chimp's blood into the hunter's body,

probably through a cut during butchering. "

Share This Story

8Share

That turning point in human history came at around the same time that the

European powers were establishing colonial outposts in what became known as " The

Scramble for Africa. " Colonisers who were " engaged in a feverish race for wealth

and glory blazed routes up muddy rivers and into dense forests that had been

travelled only sporadically by humans before, " Timberg and Halperin recount.

" The most disruptive of these intruders were thousands of African porters.

Forced into service by European colonial powers, they cut paths through the

exact area that researchers have now identified as the birthplace of the Aids

epidemic. "

The porters were coerced into giving German traders access to the ivory and

rubber wealth of Cameroon. A trading station known as Moloundou was established

on the Ngoko River about 75 miles upstream from where its waters merged with the

Sangha River. More than a thousand porters were recorded as passing through

Moloundou on a busy day, the book notes.

HIV was transported along those rivers and into the Congo Basin along with other

deadly diseases: sleeping sickness, smallpox and syphilis, which had been

brought to Africa by the Europeans. HIV likely festered in Kinshasa for decades

prior to entering into global circulation in the 1970s, the authors say.

It is likely that by 1960, between 1000 and 2000 Kinshasa residents had become

infected with HIV, the book estimates. Those unknowing early Aids victims

mingled with United Nations workers from Haiti who had come to Congo to work as

physicians and civil servants, the authors note. It is almost certainly the case

that one of those Haitians contracted HIV in Kinshasa and then became a source

of the virus in Haiti.

" Without `The Scramble for Africa,' it's hard to see how HIV could have made it

out of southeastern Cameroon to eventually kill tens of millions of people, "

Timberg and Halperin write. " Even a delay might have caused the killer strain of

HIV to die a lonely death deep in the forest.

http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/New+book+links+HIV+to+colonialism/-/2558/13\

58540/-/13rmdrrz/-/index.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

New book links HIV to colonialism

HIV first appeared in southeastern Cameroon at a time when European colonialists

were establishing outposts. Picture: File

By KEVIN KELLEY (email the author)

Posted Saturday, March 3 2012 at 13:08

The global Aids epidemic can be seen as an outgrowth of European colonialism in

Africa, argues a new book co-authored by a Washington Post journalist and an

Aids researcher at Harvard University.

The strain of the human-immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that accounts for 99 per

cent of Aids deaths " appeared to have spread from a single explosion, a big bang

of the Aids epidemic " that originated in Cameroon about 100 years ago, the

authors write. " Powering the big bang was the burgeoning trade of colonial

Africa. "

d by porters who had been virtually enslaved by European colonisers, the

virus slowly made its way to the Belgian colonial capital called Leopoldville,

the book theorises. It describes that city, now known as Kinshasa, as " Ground

Zero " of an epidemic that has gone on to claim about 25 million lives.

From Kinshasa — which is today the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo —

one " subtype " of the killer HIV strain travelled east toward Lake

sometime in the 1960s, suggests Tinderbox: How the West Sparked the Aids

Epidemic and How the World Can Finally Overcome It.

Another subtype went south to Zambia, Botswana and South Africa. And a third

" hopped all the way across the ocean to Haiti, then to the United States and

Europe, " write Post reporter Craig Timberg and Harvard epidemiologist

Halperin.

Strong evidence shows that HIV first appeared in humans in southeastern Cameroon

in either the closing decades of the 19th century or the first two decades of

the 20th century, Timberg and Halperin say. They speculate that the transmission

from simian to human occurred when " a hunter caught an infected chimpanzee for

food, allowing the virus to pass from the chimp's blood into the hunter's body,

probably through a cut during butchering. "

Share This Story

8Share

That turning point in human history came at around the same time that the

European powers were establishing colonial outposts in what became known as " The

Scramble for Africa. " Colonisers who were " engaged in a feverish race for wealth

and glory blazed routes up muddy rivers and into dense forests that had been

travelled only sporadically by humans before, " Timberg and Halperin recount.

" The most disruptive of these intruders were thousands of African porters.

Forced into service by European colonial powers, they cut paths through the

exact area that researchers have now identified as the birthplace of the Aids

epidemic. "

The porters were coerced into giving German traders access to the ivory and

rubber wealth of Cameroon. A trading station known as Moloundou was established

on the Ngoko River about 75 miles upstream from where its waters merged with the

Sangha River. More than a thousand porters were recorded as passing through

Moloundou on a busy day, the book notes.

HIV was transported along those rivers and into the Congo Basin along with other

deadly diseases: sleeping sickness, smallpox and syphilis, which had been

brought to Africa by the Europeans. HIV likely festered in Kinshasa for decades

prior to entering into global circulation in the 1970s, the authors say.

It is likely that by 1960, between 1000 and 2000 Kinshasa residents had become

infected with HIV, the book estimates. Those unknowing early Aids victims

mingled with United Nations workers from Haiti who had come to Congo to work as

physicians and civil servants, the authors note. It is almost certainly the case

that one of those Haitians contracted HIV in Kinshasa and then became a source

of the virus in Haiti.

" Without `The Scramble for Africa,' it's hard to see how HIV could have made it

out of southeastern Cameroon to eventually kill tens of millions of people, "

Timberg and Halperin write. " Even a delay might have caused the killer strain of

HIV to die a lonely death deep in the forest.

http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/New+book+links+HIV+to+colonialism/-/2558/13\

58540/-/13rmdrrz/-/index.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...