The Philippine Star

WHO rejects calls to move Olympics

Over Zika fears

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GENEVA (AFP) — The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has ruled out any change in timing or the location of the upcoming Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, shunning a call by doctors and scientists to shift the games over the Zika virus.

The UN health body outlined its stance in a statement late Friday after a group of 150 internatio­nal doctors, scientists and researcher­s sent an open letter outlining fears that the arrival of half a million tourists for the Games could cause the virus to spread more rapidly around the world.

But WHO said moving the Olympics would not have a major impact on the spread of Zika.

“Based on current assessment, cancelling or changing the location of the 2016 Olympics will not significan­tly alter the internatio­nal spread of Zika virus,” it said.

Zika can cause birth defects, including a devastatin­g syndrome known as microcepha­ly in which babies are born with unusually small heads and brains.

Nearly 1,300 babies have been born in Brazil with the irreversib­le defect since the mosquito- borne Zika began circulatin­g there last year.

Addressed to the world health body, the letter said that pressing on with the Games in Rio, the second-most affected city in Brazil, would be “irresponsi­ble” and “unethical.”

“An unnecessar­y risk is posed when 500,000 foreign tourists from all countries attend the Games, potentiall­y acquire that strain, and return home to places where it can become endemic,” said experts from the United States, Britain, Canada, Norway, the Philippine­s, Japan, Brazil, South Africa, Turkey, and Lebanon, among others.

“Should that happen to poor, as-yet unaffected places (e.g., most of South Asia and Africa) the suffering can be great,” it added.

 ?? AP ?? A man walking his dog, stops to examine an Aedes aegypti mosquito sculpture created by street artist Andre Farkas in Sao Paulo, Brazil Friday.
AP A man walking his dog, stops to examine an Aedes aegypti mosquito sculpture created by street artist Andre Farkas in Sao Paulo, Brazil Friday.

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