The Daily Telegraph

UK primed for biological attack in wake of 9/11

Ministers hastily signed off £15m medical package to combat effects of nuclear radiation and nerve agents

- By Gordon Rayner Associate editor

MEDICINES to combat anthrax, smallpox and botulism were stockpiled by the UK after the 9/11 terrorist atrocities amid fears of a nuclear, biological or chemical attack, newly released documents show.

The Department of Health was given £15million to help treat victims of everything from nuclear radiation to the nerve agent sarin, as ministers scrambled to respond to the al-qaeda attacks on New York and Washington.

Protective clothing, decontamin­ation units, needles, syringes and other equipment would all need to be ordered in case of an attack on the civilian population, officials said.

Details of the response to the worst terrorist attack in history are contained in official papers released by the Public Records Office of Northern Ireland.

Clive Gowdy, permanent secretary of the Department of Health in Stormont, discussed the need for stockpilin­g in correspond­ence with Gerry Loughran, then head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service, in which the wider UK response was also referred to.

Mr Gowdy wrote: “From our contacts with the Department of Health in London, the main risks identified here are anthrax, smallpox, botulism, and nerve gases such as sarin. As before, the hospitals, ambulance service and fire service would be heavily involved and there would be a need for protective clothing and antibiotic­s and antidotes to whatever agents were used.

“There would also be issues around the nature of the transmissi­on procedures used for the agents in question. For example, a chemical or biological weapon released into the air in a crowded area would create different circumstan­ces from a weapon of this type released into the water supply or released by airborne transmissi­on over a wide area.”

Mr Gowdy said there was a need to stockpile “supplies of antibiotic­s and antidotes, needles and syringes and protective clothing etc”.

He added: “We will also need to ensure that we have sufficient decontamin­ation capacity and that staff are properly trained to deal with the possible weapons and outcomes they might face.”

Mr Gowdy estimated that Northern Ireland would need to spend £750,000 stockpilin­g supplies, based on the fact that the Department of Health in London had been given an extra £15 million for the stockpilin­g of supplies.

Mr Gowdy wrote to Mr Loughran on September 26, 2001, a fortnight after the attacks in the US.

He said local firefighte­rs had been particular­ly affected and felt a sense of “solidarity and bereavemen­t” with counterpar­ts in New York.

Mr Gowdy said senior fire chiefs had been assessing whether there were any lessons if a similar attack happened in Northern Ireland.

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