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          Title[ Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill and the Avian Flu

          Date[ July 19, 2005

   Location[ Washington, DC

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Mr. President, I rise today in support of H.R. 2057, the Foreign

Operations Appropriation Bill. I'd also like to highlight one aspect of

the bill.


Since coming to the Senate six months ago, one of the foreign policy and

health issues I have focused on relates to the avian flu. I am pleased

that this bill includes $10 million to combat the spread of this

potential pandemic, adding to the $25 million that the Senate provided

in the supplemental appropriations bill in April.


I thank the managers of this bill, Senators McConnell and Leahy, and

their staffs for working with me on this important issue. I know that

Senator McConnell has a longstanding interest in Southeast Asia, and

Senator Leahy has always been a champion of international health issues,

making the avian flu something I know they both care deeply about.


In the last few weeks, scientists have reported that a deadlier version

of the avian flu has now spread to migrant birds that could carry the

disease out of Asia and across the world.


While it may not seem that threatening to many Americans at first, this

bird flu could easily transform into a human flu. And if it does, it

could be one of the deadliest flus mankind has ever known - even worse

than the 1918 flu pandemic that killed 675,000 Americans and 50 million

worldwide.


Already, there have been 108 human cases of avian flu, resulting in 54

deaths. And while the virus has not yet mutated into a full-blown human

flu, recent developments suggest it might be heading in that direction.

In recent months, the virus has been detected in mammals that have never

previously been infected, including tigers, leopards and cats. A few

weeks ago, the World Health Organization reported that avian flu strains

in Vietnam are lasting longer and spreading to more humans. And

according to government officials, a few cases of human-to-human spread

have already occurred.


Every day, there are new reports about the increasing dangers of the

avian flu. Last month, it was revealed that Chinese farmers have tried

to suppress outbreaks of the avian flu by using human antiviral drugs on

infected animals. As a result, one strain of the virus has become

resistant to these drugs, thus making the drugs ineffective in

protecting humans against a possible pandemic. And just this week,

researchers found that ducks infected with the virus were contagious for

up to 17 days, causing the animals to become - in the researchers' words

- "medical Trojan horses" for transmitting the disease to humans.


Simply put, the world is not ready for a potential outbreak of this

deadly flu. In fact, we aren't even close.


There is no known vaccine for the avian flu, and producing one could

take months once an outbreak occurs. And while the World Health

Organization recommends that every nation stockpiles enough flu

treatment to treat a quarter of its population, the United States has

only ordered enough to treat less than 1% of ours.


We can't just stand by and hope that this virus doesn't reach our shores

when it only takes hours to travel from one side of the world to the

other. It's time for America to lead the world in taking decisive

action to prevent a potential global tragedy.


We should start by doing what we can to fight the virus while it's still

mainly in Southeast Asia. That's why I fought for and obtained $25

million for prevention efforts by the CDC, the Agency for International

Development, the Health and Human Services Department, and other

agencies. And that's why I requested another $10 million in this bill.


In addition, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved language

that I offered directing President Bush to form a senior-level task

force to devise an international strategy to deal with the avian flu and

coordinate policy among our government agencies. I hope that the Bush

administration forms this task force immediately without waiting for

legislation to be passed.


Yet, these are only modest first steps. International health experts

believe that Southeast Asia will be an epicenter of influenza for

decades. That's why we need to create a permanent framework for

curtailing the spread of future infectious diseases - a framework that

would increase international disease surveillance, response capacity and

public education and coordination, especially in Southeast Asia.


But we must also prepare our own country in the event that a global

pandemic reaches America. That's why I recently introduced the AVIAN

Act, which helps make sure that Americans are protected from a possible

outbreak of the avian flu.


When the threat is this real, we should be increasing research into

possible flu vaccines, and we should be ordering enough doses of flu

treatment to cover the recommended 25% of our population - just like

England and other Western countries have done.


We should also ensure that our Health and Human Services department and

state governments put in place a plan as to how they would address a

potential flu pandemic, including the purchasing and distributing of

vaccines. A year after a draft of a federal plan was published, a final

version has yet to be finalized. We shouldn't have to wait any longer,

because the avian flu certainly won't.


We are extremely fortunate that so far, the avian flu has not been found

in the United States. But in an age when you can board planes in Bangkok

or Hong Kong and arrive in Chicago, Burlington or Louisville in hours,

we must face the reality that these exotic killer diseases are not

isolated health problems half a world away, but direct and immediate

threats to security and prosperity here at home.


Again, I thank Senators McConnell and Leahy for including this important

funding in the supplemental appropriations bill and now including

additional funding in this bill. And I thank the distinguished chairman

of the Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Lugar, for his leadership on

this issue


I ask unanimous consent that several articles and editorials about the

avian flu be included in the record. Thank you, and I yield the floor.


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