La
BBC entrevista a Rafael Vidal, asesor de Planificación Estratégica de
Belt Ibérica, S.A. para analizar la amenaza bioterrorista
El bioterrorismo:
¿amenaza real?
 |
|
Rafael Vidal Delgado,
Asesor de
Planificación Estratégica de Belt Ibérica S.A |
La
cadena internacional BBC entrevistó desde Londres para
el programa Enfoque a Rafael Vidal Delgado, Asesor de Planificación
Estratégica de Belt Ibérica S.A., en relación a las últimas
declaraciones en Ciudad del Cabo de Ronald Noble, secretario general de
Inerpol, sobre la posibilidad de un ataque bioterrorista de Al Qaeda.
En esta conferencia a puerta cerrada en Ciudad del Cabo, participan 90
delegados de 41 países. Interpol, con sede central en Lyon, es presidida
actualmente por el jefe de la Policía sudafricana, Jackie Selebi.
Las armas químicas y
biológicas son una amenaza real en nuestros días y el
alto jefe
policial reclamó una mayor cooperación entre las autoridades sanitarias
y los investigadores. Rafael Vidal Delgado además explica, que han de
tomarse medidas preventivas ante las distintas amenazas bioterroristas
para que el daño, en caso de producirse el ataque, sea el menor posible.
Escuchen
la entrevista a Rafael Vidal en el siguiente enlace:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediaselector/check/spanish/meta/tx/enfoque?nbram=1&nbwm=1&size=au&lang=es&bgc=003399
Interpol bioterrorism
workshop opens in South Africa.
Delegates encouraged to develop multi-agency response |
The first Interpol
bioterrorism workshop opened in South Africa on Monday with
delegates called upon to encourage greater recognition and
response development to the threat of bioterrorism in their
countries.
More than 90 law enforcement, scientific and legal experts from
41 African countries are attending the three-day event in Cape
Town, which is the first of three such Interpol regional
workshops to be held. The two others will take place in
Singapore and Chile in 2006.
In addition to discussions with specialists on issues such as
laboratory security, bioterrorism identification and assessment,
those attending the workshop will also take part in a table top
simulation of a major bioterrorism event to illustrate the need
for all stakeholders to think and act on regional, national and
international levels in responding to such incidents.
Interpol President and Commissioner of the South African Police
Service Jackie Selebi opened the workshop, emphasising the need
for multi-agency co-operation and communication.
'We as policemen cannot effectively face the problem of
bioterrorism or the proliferation of biological weapons without
building strong partnerships with scientists, educators and
public health practitioners. Combating bioterrorism requires
communities unaccustomed to working with one another to learn a
common language and a common way of thinking,' said Mr Selebi.
'The African regional workshop aims to strengthen regional co-operation
and enable all agencies to immediately identify and work closely
with the right partners at the right time to establish a common
response against biological weapons and to resolve the
consequences of bio-attacks.'
Interpol's continued support in developing national bioterrorism
prevention programmes was underlined by the announcement of a 'train
the trainer' project for National Central Bureaus in the
organization's 184 member countries.
'Defence measures against a biological attack are neither well
known nor easily implemented, so there is a natural tendency for
law enforcement services to put them aside in favour of 'more
urgent' problems that they are more comfortable dealing with,'
said Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble.
'Political support and funding for security programmes tends to
be orientated towards the traditional areas of crime which
affect citizens on a daily basis. However, Interpol strongly
believes that the risks of bioterrorism are so momentous that
the police and the public health communities must break down the
barriers preventing close collaboration, locally, nationally and
internationally.'
Interpol's bioterrorism programme was launched in 2004 following
a grant of almost one million dollars by the US-based Sloan
Foundation.
In March 2005, Interpol hosted the first Global Congress on
Preventing Bioterrorism, attended by more than 500 delegates
from 155 countries, making it the largest-ever gathering of
police, senior officials and experts. |
Fuentes: BBC
Interpol
Belt Ibérica, S.A.
23.11.05
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Suplemento temático: Bioterrorismo