Sunday Times

Mark Wainberg: Virologist who forced Mbeki to back down on Aids denialism

- — Chris Barron

MARK Wainberg, who has died at the age of 71, was a frontline HIV/Aids researcher from Canada who played a key role in forcing the government of Thabo Mbeki to make nevirapine available to pregnant women living with HIV.

The government had refused to make this drug available to prevent mother-to-child transmissi­on of HIV.

When the Treatment Action Campaign took it to court, the government filed a 1 000-page responding affidavit containing exaggerate­d claims about nevirapine resistance which it argued would lead to a public health catastroph­e in South Africa.

The TAC had to scramble fast to counter these claims. This meant finding the best expert in the world on virology and HIV resistance. This was Wainberg, a professor of microbiolo­gy and immunology at McGill University in Montreal.

Wainberg was a virologist who became interested in Aids in the 1980s during the early years of the pandemic. In 1984 he establishe­d the McGill University Aids Centre at the Jewish General Hospital.

Within five days of being contacted by the TAC he wrote a detailed affidavit which trashed the government’s case against distributi­ng nevirapine, and took it to the South African embassy in Canada to get it sworn and certified so it could be included in the TAC’s court papers.

He argued that the use of the antiretrov­iral nevirapine should be encouraged, and its effectiven­ess should take precedence over considerat­ions of drug resistance.

With his affidavit in hand the TAC won its case and in December 2001 the government was ordered by the high court to roll out nevirapine. It was denied the right to appeal and went to the Constituti­onal Court, which in 2002 upheld the high court order.

As president of the Internatio­nal Aids Society, Wainberg was instrument­al in bringing the Internatio­nal Aids Conference to Durban in 2000, the first such conference to be held in Africa at a time when the extent of the epidemic on the continent was unknown in the developed world.

Wainberg’s Durban conference changed all that. One of the outcomes was the availabili­ty of low-cost treatments in the developing world, although in South Africa this was negated by the government’s refusal to make ARVs available in the public sector.

The conference shone an internatio­nal spotlight on what activists and researcher­s were clear was Mbeki’s murderous denial of a link between HIV and Aids.

It started a wave of internatio­nal revulsion which came to a head at the Aids conference in Toronto in 2006 which was co-chaired by Wainberg.

It was this conference that finally broke the back of official Aids denialism in South Africa. Ambassador Zola Skweyiya said health minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang was a national embarrassm­ent and a cause of shame in the world Aids community.

Within a month of the conference Mbeki climbed down and instructed his deputy Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka to begin talks with the TAC.

Wainberg estimated that by the time Mbeki was forced to reverse his position, the number of HIV-infected people in South Africa was 25% higher than it would have been because of his denialist policies. He wrote that Mbeki’s “insistence on propagatin­g flagrant disinforma­tion about the disease amounted to an arguably criminal abrogation of leadership”.

He called for legislatio­n to counter the damage perpetrate­d by denialists. He said the scientific evidence that HIV caused Aids was no less incontrove­rtible than evidence that cigarette smoking caused cancer and heart disease.

“Policymake­rs should defer to proven scientific fact and stop the transmissi­on of deadly lies,” he wrote.

Wainberg was born in Montreal on April 21 1945. He attended McGill University where he graduated with a BSc before earning a PhD in molecular biology from Columbia University.

He was one of a few scientists who left the comfort of their laboratori­es to become activists for evidence-based and human rights-based health policy.

He combined this with cutting-edge scientific work, notably his discovery in 1989 that the drug lamivudine was effective against HIV.

It became one of the first effective treatments for people with HIV, and is still widely used in an “Aids cocktail” to treat patients today.

Wainberg drowned after an asthma attack while swimming near his condominiu­m in Bal Harbour, Florida.

He is survived by his wife, Susan, and two sons.

Propagatin­g flagrant disinforma­tion about the disease amounted to criminal abrogation of leadership

 ??  ?? AIDS ACTIVIST: Mark Wainberg
AIDS ACTIVIST: Mark Wainberg

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