EARL NASH
Swine flu and bird flu viruses are being mixed together by a WHO associate, French professor, Bruno Lina, potentially creating a lethal virus, according to reporter Ester Nordland on the internet news site Norway Health.
When the Swine and Bird flu viruses mix or mutate, a mutant virus as devastating as the avian flu virus and as contagious as the swine flu virus--one worse than the Spanish Flu--will be ready for research, as a new bioweapon, or as another "accidental" release.
Are Lina and his team carrying out this research to find a key to predict how future pandemics will evolve?
Or, are the WHO and Lina creating a lethal bioweapon, under the pretext of having to predict the course of a future pandemic.
Or, will the lab-created Super Flu be "accidentally' released into the environment?
continues from: http://www.siste.no/Innenriks/helse/article4726428.ece
"In one of the safest laboratories in the world, scientists are intent on mixing one of the most contagious viruses in this world with one of the most deadly ones, she writes.
The goal is to find out whether swine flu and bird flu can end up as a deadly mixture, writes the Norwegian news agency ANB.
Swine flu (H1N1) is very contagious, but ends up only killing a minority of the persons who actually get the flu.
Bird flu (H5N1), on the other hand, kills more than 60 percent of its human victims, but only in rare cases spreads from person to person.
At the Inserm laboratories biosecurity level 4 in Lyon in France deadly viruses like Ebola, Marburg and Hendra are locked in a safe. The laboratory is situated in a building that may withstand both earthquakes and explosions.
The researchers move around in protection equipment reminiscent of space suits withan inbuilt supply of oxygen.
Inserm is the national French institute for human health and medical research.
Now a team of researchers in Lyon intend to investigate whether the H1N1-virus will interfere with its more deadly relative H5N1 and become a virus with the most dreadful traits of both of them. If they discover what kind of mutations will occur, and what kind of influenza may appear, it might turn out to be a key to predict, how future pandemics will evolve.
Until now they have investigated, how H1N1 can develop resistancy towards the pharmaceutical product Tamiflu.
Now the primal investigator of the research team, Bruno Lina, hopes to be allowed to mix the two viruses. – It is a controversial study, but it is fundamental research which should be carried out, says Lina to the magazine Nature. – If you discover, what parts of the H5H1-virus is most prune to change, you are able to be more alert, if the virus change in those parts, says Lina."