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Philippe Krynen 10 years on



AIDS IN AFRICA

A field experience in Tanzania

(translated from the original French*)

Dr. Marc Deru

The time is 1981. Philippe Krynen, a pilot, bids farewell to aviation. He and his wife 
have decided
to change the direction of their lives and, henceforth, to care for orphan children, 
said to be so
numerous in Africa. They join the Austrian association, SOS Kinderdorf Int., and, for 
three years,
run childrens' villages in Senegal, Ivory Coast and Rwanda. In 1984, they spend some 
time with Third
World children in Bangladesh and in India (in the Kerala district).

This three-year experience enables them to realize what it is they really want to do, 
ie help
orphans get off to a good start in life - without removing them from their environment 
- and to set
up their own aid structure. In preparation for this, they undergo nursing training at 
Sélestat
(France). Three years thus go by.

Travel

In 1988, with diplomas in hand, they decide to do an on-site exploration. They choose 
Tanzania. For
two months, they backpack up and down the country until they are informed of the 
dramatic plight of
thousands of children in the Kagera, a region bounded by Rwanda, Uganda and Lake 
Victoria.

"Ten years later, I can remember our arrival in Bukoba. I can see once again the grey 
dawn after a
long, uncomfortable night aboard an overcrowded boat, the mud puddles by the quayside. 
It has just
stopped raining.

Dense mist from the lake drowns the countryside between the harbour and the hotel. The 
mist hums: it
's made up of tiny flies. Billions of them. Their predator, a featherweight spider 
with outlandishly
long legs, weaves its web on facades, trees and hedges. The webs are tattered by the 
wind; the town
is falling to pieces. Observations made on the three following days of the visit are 
likewise:
impassable roads, broken bridges, empty stores, rationed petrol (gasoline), no running 
water, no
electricity. The hotel makes us pay in advance so as to be able to purchase meal 
ingredients. We are
the only customers.

What kind of a war was it that caused the capital of a region with a million and a 
half inhabitants
to be in this state? "Things have gotten better", I am told, "five years ago, you 
couldn't even find
a box of matches. Soap came in from Uganda by contraband."

It's worse in the villages. The banana plantations are declining, the livestock is 
sick, the huts
have been eaten away by termites and the people are in rags. Samsom Musheba, the 
Lutheran bishop,
drives us 40 km to the North, to the Uganda border, to visit Kashenye. I remember the 
four hours of
track under driving rain, the ghostly silhouettes of chilled, half-naked children 
huddling together
as the Land Rover went by.

While on foot in Kashenye, I see the same silhouettes up close during an interminable 
door-to-door
visit behind the mayor and the pastor, who point out to us the houses that are the 
most affected by
"this disease", the name of which is never mentioned."

So wrote Philippe Krynen not long ago.

With these unsettling impressions in mind, they return to Europe and get in touch with 
the European
Economic Community (EEC), which promises funds. They stimulate public awareness and 
draw the media's
attention to the drama that is unfolding in the Great Lakes Region, which soon becomes 
labelled as
the epicentre of AIDS in Africa.

Things could have ended there, with the publishing of an upsetting news report on a 
dramatic
situation. But this is merely the beginning of the story, since, as opposed to the 
reporters,
researchers, media representatives and experts of every kind who have been visiting 
"AIDS-plagued"
Subsaharan Africa for the past 10 to 15 years, Philippe and Evelyne Krynen return to 
the region to
get their project off the ground. They are backed up by promises of funds from the EEC 
as well as by
four thousand child sponsorship pledges from families in France.

Partage** Tanzania

In December 1989, following eight months of specialization at the Institute of 
Tropical Medicine
(IMTA), in Antwerp, they are back in Bukoba. It is in that location that the NGO, 
Partage Tanzania,
is created, with a view to setting up a global health and development programme 
covering an area of
50 x 50 km (31 x 31 miles) and encompassing some 30-odd villages and 70,000 
inhabitants.

It is also there that, in the following years, Philippe makes observations which, 
little by little,
cause him to reconsider the conclusions he had drawn during his first trip in 1988. 
These had led
him to declare that the Kagera region was the victim of a new and deadly disease, a 
terrible
epidemic.

Of course, he doesn't question his initial observations: the area around Bukoba is 
indeed in the
direst misery, and the immunity of its inhabitants to disease has totally collapsed; 
the acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) appears to be an obvious reality. However, he wonders 
about the
origin of this social distress and widespread breakdown of immunity. He seeks an 
answer, he asks
questions.

Kagera

At the beginning of the Twentieth Century, the region was considered a little 
paradise, thanks to
its favourable climate (1,200m (4,000') altitude), regular rainfall throughout the 
year, banana
trees with bean plots - ensuring an abundant food supply - growing in their shade 
around every
house, with fisheries products to complete the diet. The development of the coffee 
trade brings in
cash. Children are schooled on the spot or are sent to Uganda for their secondary 
education.

However, from the First World War on, a series of events brought about a complete 
reversal of this
idyllic situation. East Coast Fever decimated the cattle. Banana trees thus deprived 
of their
natural fertilizer - dung - slowly withered away, to the point of falling prey to a 
fungus disease
several decades later, ultimately bringing about a brutal decline in their 
productivity. In
addition, coffee prices collapsed. Nationalisation schemes, begun in 1967, resulted in 
the
dismantling of the economic system. Then came the ultimate catastrophe: the 
devastation of the
region brought about by Idi Amin Dada's war against Tanzania in 1979. Serious 
malnutrition became a
lasting feature. Basic commodities were in short supply. The children who managed to 
survive
malnutrition reached adulthood with weakened immune systems, and mortality (from 
tuberculosis and
other respiratory diseases, intestinal infections and massive infestation with 
parasites) in these
young, chronic malaria-ridden adults was high. The disastrous sanitary and 
agricultural situations
forced the survivors to leave and try their luck in the large East African cities.

The Partage Tanzania Programme

This is the picture Philippe Krynen has before his eyes when he begins his work in the 
Kagera
region. He now understands the causes of this catastrophic situation. He discovers 
that half of the
"orphans" are actually wards of the extended family, that is, children left in the 
village in the
care of their often resourceless grandparents by their own parents who have gone off 
to the city in
search of means of survival. He thus begins his programme with the aim of supporting 
each orphan
child till adulthood, while maintaining the child in his/her family environment.

In former times, a fatherless or motherless child would have been taken in charge by 
the clan. A
tutor responsible for raising the child and protecting his/her inheritance would have 
been
appointed. The elders would have seen to it that the child's rights were respected. 
Nowadays, with
the overly large number of orphans, this traditional system no longer functions. It is 
now the
grandparents who take in the children, without the support of the community, which 
itself has fewer
and fewer assets at its disposal. It is now up to elderly people lacking in resources 
to feed, send
off to school and educate swarms of grandchildren. In certain villages of the North, 
one family in
three is thus composed of very young alongside very old people. These unbalanced 
families are in
great need of support.

Partage Tanzania thus took it upon itself to create an overarching health care 
structure: day-care c
entres in each village, where children are looked after by day and return to their 
families in the
evening; a health care centre in Bukoba, in which about twenty children can be fed, 
observed and
looked after until the improvement in their state of health allows them to return to 
their families;
a dispensary in each village to ensure follow-up, and a malaria prevention programme 
(malaria being
the prime cause of mortality among children in the Kagera), based on educating people 
as to the
benefits of using mosquito netting. In addition, kindergartens, primary schools and 
manual skills
workshops were gradually set up in all of the villages. A programme for the 
rehabilitation of
agricultural land was instituted (for growing bananas, coffee and beans); houses were 
rebuilt,
sources of spring water were managed to ensure the widespread use of really safe 
drinking water.

Unorthodox observations

For two years, in line with what he had learnt at the IMTA [Antwerp Institute of 
Tropical Medicine],
Philippe continues to look upon the health situation as the consequence of an epidemic 
attributable
to a new virus - HIV - and he decides to do some testing.

What he first notices is that the children, whether HIV-positive or negative, have 
exactly equal
chances of being restored to health, provided they receive proper nourishment and 
care. What he also
notices is that HIV-positive subjects, when tested following a bout of malaria, for 
instance, can be
HIV-negative six months later.

On the occasion of the eight international congress on AIDS in Amsterdam, in July 
1992, he makes
mention of an unexpected observation: tests carried out on his own staff of 149 
persons revealed
that only 5.4 % were HIV-positive! His statement is rejected. This survey is 
valuleless because the
group tested is not considered as being representative of the general population. So 
it must be,
undoubtedly. Philippe returns to Tanzania and, in order to clear up the matter once 
and for all,
goes about testing all of the inhabitants (some 842 persons) of a village. Result: 
13.8% are
HIV-positive, whereas the WHO states that in the Great Lakes Region, some 40 to 50% are
"contaminated by HIV".

During the Yaoundé congress on AIDS in December 1992, he gives a press conference in 
which he
presents the results of this survey and expresses his doubts as to the viral origin of 
the
"epidemic". His statement is very unfavourably received by participants at the 
congress. Philippe
Krynen suddenly loses all credibility; whereas he had been the darling of such 
congresses in the
past - for so long as he carried the torch of the viral theory of AIDS - he has now 
become the
heretic to be rejected and avoided.

An interview with Neville Hodgkinson in 1993, published in the Sunday Times [UK] under 
the
provocative title of "AIDS, the Epidemic that Never Was" finally discredits him 
totally. Funds
promised by the EEC never arrive. The Tanzanian government threatens to expel him, but 
quickly goes
back on its decision, after taking note of the effectiveness and disinterested nature 
of his work in
the Kagera region.

Since then, Philippe Krynen has retired from the "public life" of congresses and 
relations with the
major press media. He goes about implementing his health programme quietly and 
efficiently by
applying and disseminating elementary common-sense measures. All that is necessary, as 
well as
indispensable, to be in good health and to overcome immunodeficiency resulting from 
miserable living
conditions is to eat properly, drink unpolluted water and take the appropriate 
measures to prevent
and treat the endemic, familiar diseases that have been around for a long time. 
Moreover, in order
to ensure that the health of the population will not become dependent on outside 
intervention,
education must be promoted; the young and not-so-young should be made aware of the 
causes of
declining health.

In the meantime, he makes another observation: young HIV-positive children who are 
vaccinated in
accordance with Western practices and treated with Bactrim and Nizoral to prevent the 
onset of
opportunistic diseases continue to have very fragile immune systems and all too 
frequently die. The
effects of these long-term immune system-depressing medications clearly outweigh the 
anticipated
benefits. Thus, from 1994-1995 onwards, these "preventive" measures are also set 
aside, resulting in
a very noticeable drop in infantile mortality. From this point on, no more mention is 
made of the
theory of virally induced acquired immunodeficiency.

Results

What makes Philippe Krynen's experience in Tanzania particulary interesting derives 
from the
timespan it covers and that the results obtained can now be evaluated with 12 years of 
hindsight.

In 1989, he set himself up in the region considered to be the very epicentre of the 
AIDS epidemic,
in the midst of a population declared by the WHO and the big media to be doomed to 
rapid decimation,
unless drastic measures were taken to halt the spread of a new and deadly sexually 
transmitted virus
called HIV.

It so happens that since that time, no one in this area was treated with antiviral 
drugs (cellular
poisons with very serious side-effects, especially in young cells and bodies), no 
condoms were
distributed, no consideration was given to the notion that the immune system breakdown 
and the high
mortality rate in the population were attributable to infection by a new virus, and 
HIV tests
revealed themselves to be of no practical use whatsoever.

Medical follow-up of thousands of orphans and abandoned children was based on ensuring 
an adequate
and balanced diet, consumption of safe drinking water and providing a safe and secure 
family-type
environment. Prevention consisted essentially in educating the population in basic 
hygiene as well
as in the use of mosquito netting. Medical care per se was limited to the classical 
treatment of
endemic diseases (malaria, borreliosis, tuberculosis, parasitic ailments) and of two 
types of acute
diseases which are a frequent cause of mortality: respiratory infections, on the one 
hand, and
intestinal conditions (of parasitic, bacterial or mycotic [fungal] origin) with 
serious diarrhea and
dehydration, on the other.

In the space of only a few years, these basic sanitation measures led to a spectacular 
decline in
morbidity and mortality, as well as to the disappearance of this immunodeficiency 
epidemic which had
placed the region at the epicentre of AIDS. Instead, it is now the epicentre of a 
health and social
recovery process!

In the area covered by Partage Tanzania, the infant mortality rate (ie for that part 
of the
population under 18 years of age) is now, according to statistics, equivalent to a 
third of the
national rate for that same age group, and to a quarter of the rate for the Kagera 
region as a
whole. Those figures speak for themselves.

The Partage Tanzania Programme is now approved, supported and often cited by the 
Tanzanian
authorities as an example to follow in the development field.

It must be noted that, over the last twelve years, the situation outside the area 
covered by Partage
Tanzania, ie for the whole of the Kagera region, has also significantly improved. A 
ghost town in
1988, Bukoba is now a lively and busy place. The spectre of a deadly epidemic has 
receded and Kagera
is no longer referred to as the "epicentre of AIDS in Africa". The epidemic of misery 
has abated and
the region has regained a certain equilibrium thanks to social and sanitation measures 
applied by
the Tanzanian government.

Of what value are all the scientific studies and discussions on "HIV", the statistical 
estimates and
the catastrophic predictions, in the face of these irrefutable facts and results? Why 
insist at all
costs on administering highly toxic products to HIV-positive pregnant women who are 
essentially
suffering from dietary deficiencies, malaria and parasitic ailments, when we know that 
the children
they will bear will be in excellent health, provided they are simply given food 
supplements during
their pregnancy (as demonstrated in a 1998 study)?

What conclusions are to be drawn? The "HIV" virus which scientific authorities have 
peremptorily -
and in the absence of any concrete evidence - declared to be the cause of AIDS has 
never allowed
itself to be isolated, cultured and analysed in compliance with the criteria laid down 
in classical
virology. In spite of the very intense reactions that such pronouncements invariably 
engender, it
must be stated clearly that the very existence of an "HIV" virus remains a mere 
hypothesis, that the
"evidence" of its presence in a patient's blood (as determined by HIV and viral load 
testing) only
indicates the presence of particular proteins and genome fragments of undetermined 
origin. These
tests have no specificity and thus do not constitute proof of the presence of a new 
pathological
virus.

The Kagera experience clearly shows that the viral hypothesis put forth for AIDS does 
not accord
with the reality on the ground and that the causes of immune system breakdown in 
Africa are
obviously extreme poverty as well as the lack of basic sanitary infrastructures.

This plain common sense position, held by numerous scientists and doctors throughout 
the world, is,
however, largely ignored, ridiculed or even violently rejected owing to the high 
stakes involved in
the fight against HIV.

At present, the Great Lakes Region no longer makes the headlines. Rather, it is 
countries such as
Botswana or South Africa, said to be "contaminated to the extent of 40 or 50% by HIV", 
which are the
object of apocalyptic forecasts. Now it is President Mbeki who is in disgrace because 
he dares to
question the basis of the fight against HIV.

Can one ignore the fact that, in spite of its status as a "rich" African country, 
South Africa
remains profoundly scarred by the apartheid regime? This regime, which ceased to 
exist, from a
political standpoint, in 1994, continues to survive in every economic and social 
aspect. Most of the
land is still in the hands of a minority of large landowners; this state of affairs 
deprives rural
people of any food self-sufficiency as well as of the possibility of living with 
dignity. A high
urban crime rate and drug use (which, along with malnutrition, constitutes another 
major cause of
immunodeficiency) are thriving against the backdrop of a deplorable economic 
situation; the politics
remain indulgent vis-à-vis the business world as well as the foreign banks, holders of 
enormous debt
claims inherited from apartheid. The GEAR, a "made in South Africa" structural 
adjustment scheme put
into place in 1997 (with the applause of the IMF) is a dismal failure for the majority 
of the
population.

Will Mr. Thabo Mbeki and his government, who inherited this highly tense situation in 
1999, have the
will as well as the means to reverse present trends and implement a real social 
policy? Will they
take the necessary measures? Will Mr. Mbeki succeed in implementing a basic health and 
social
programme, comparable to what has happened in the Kagera region, in his vast country? 
Will he be
able to set, for all of Africa, the example of a great country which has freed itself 
from this
epidemic of misery? This is within the realm of possibility and it is what we hope 
will come to be.

Marc Deru, June 2001

References








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