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YEKATERINBURG, Russia (AP) - On an April morning in 1979, Lazar
Karsayev awoke early as usual, drank a cup of tea and walked to
work at a ceramics factory. A few hours later, the fit 64-year-old
was sent home with what doctors said was a bad cold.
When medics wearing biohazard suits showed up to take him to the
hospital the next day, his family suspected something much worse.
A few days later, they were taken under police guard to watch Karsayev's
coffin - filled with chlorinated lime and sealed in plastic - being
lowered into one of dozens of fresh graves at the edge of a cemetery.
Doctors told them he died of anthrax, but nobody told them how or
why.
A mysterious outbreak of the disease killed at least 68 people 22
years ago in the Russian industrial center of Sverdlovsk, today
known as Yekaterinburg. At the time, neither the victims nor their
families suspected they had been hit by a biological weapon.
In 1992, then-Russian President Boris Yeltsin, who in 1979 was Communist
Party chief in Sverdlovsk, said in an interview that the outbreak
was caused by an accident at a germ warfare laboratory. Until that
time, the official explanation had always been infected meat.
The laboratory, known as Military Compound 19, formed part of a
network of germ factories in the Soviet Union's biological weapons
program, which produced hundreds of tons of anthrax.
The Soviet Union joined the Biological Weapons Convention, banning
germ warfare, in 1972. But Russian officials admitted later that
Moscow violated the treaty for 20 years.
Despite that admission, the Russian military has never provided
details about the Sverdlovsk incident, and a shroud of secrecy continues
to hang over it and the still functioning compound where the leak
occurred.
"Nobody has ever officially told us that this was from biological
weapons,'' said Karsayev's daughter, Lidia Tretyakova. ``Nobody
has ever apologized.''
No official records are available about the outbreak. The 1979 anthrax
cases were skipped entirely in the regional epidemiological service's
annual report, said Viktor Romanenko, deputy chief of the service.
Karsayev's death certificate lists ``infection'' as the cause of
death, his daughter said.
Details of the incident were first described in a 1994 article by
Harvard's Matthew Meselson in the journal Science. Meselson and
his co-authors found that most of the 77 known patients lived and
worked in the southern part of the city, near Military Compound
19, and concluded the outbreak was caused by a spray of anthrax
spores originating at the compound.
The leak is assumed to have occurred in the early hours of April
2, about two days before people began getting sick.
"All those who fell ill were people who, for one reason or
another, had been outside at night or in the early morning,'' Romanenko
said. Some, like Karsayev, were not outside, but in factories with
ventilation systems that sucked in outside air.
Romanenko said he and his colleagues noticed the pattern immediately,
but were not free to say so.
Following the official line, local public health officials took
meat samples for testing and cracked down on butchers. But they
also took measures to prevent the spread of the disease through
the air.
In a neighborhood of wooden one-story houses next to the sprawling
and heavily guarded Compound 19, residents recalled how immediately
after the outbreak, their dirt roads were paved and the roofs and
walls of their houses were washed.
"Nobody told us what was going on,'' Yelena Klyuchagina said.
``We just saw these people in masks washing our houses. There was
no information.''
Cases of human anthrax occurred only a few miles from the compound.
But the bacteria had traveled in smaller concentrations into outlying
villages, where it killed animals.
Alexandra Sankova, her husband and nine children were quarantined
in their house for a month during the outbreak.
"Our ram died of anthrax, so they isolated us,'' said the
75-year-old resident of Bolshoye Sidelnikovo, a village about 12
miles from Yekaterinburg. ``People brought us food because we were
not allowed out.''
In Sverdlovsk, Tretyakova and her family were vaccinated and treated
with antibiotics.
"They told us that all of us who had contact with him would
also die,'' she said. "Not even our relatives came to see us.''
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