 |
 |
IPA-NY MISSION:
IPA-NY, a sponsored
project of the Independent
Press Association (IPA),
provides assistance to
New York's ethnic and
community press. |
 |
IPA MISSION:
The Independent Press
Association (IPA) works to
promote and support
independent publications
committed to social justice
and a free press.
In pursuit of this goal, the
IPA provides technical
assistance to its member
publications and is a
vigorous public advocate of
the independent press. |
|  |
| |
Administration of Children’s Services admits “experiments”
on childrenBy José Acosta, El Diario / La Prensa, 31 December 2004.
Translated from Spanish by Chris
Brandt.
Carrying placards saying “ACS STOP
DRUGGING OUR CHILDREN,” activists from the December 12th
Movement organization and members of the African-American
community carried out a protest demonstration yesterday across
from the Incarnation Children’s Center in Washington Heights.
They accused the Center of “allowing HIV-positive minors under
its care to be used for medical experiments.”
Mowale
Clay of the December 12th Movement said yesterday that the
purpose of the demonstration was to protect Latino and
African-American children under the care of the New York City
Administration of Children’s Services, ACS, who are “forced to
submit to experiments with anti-HIV medications which are
lethal and toxic.”
“These children have no one to
defend them,” said Clay, pointing out that these experiments
with new drugs against HIV/AIDS are also “a violation of these
children’s civil rights, and are racist too, because the
majority of the children in the tests are Latino and Black.”
Gerald McKelvey, spokesman for the Incarnation
Children’s Center (ICC), an ACS agency operated by the
Catholic Church, said in a communiqué yesterday that his
institution was only one of the more than 25 adoption agencies
in New York City which took part in the “experiments.”
“From 1993 to the beginning of 2002, approximately 60
children from Incarnation Children’s Center were subjects of a
series of clinical trials on a national level, with the
support of the National Institute of Health, to test the
efficacy of medications to alleviate the suffering and
significantly prolong the lives of children infected with
HIV,” said McKelvey, and pointed out that the test conducted
at ICC was under the supervision of Columbia University.
“Throughout the country, thousands of children with
HIV took part in the tests,” explained the spokesperson for
ICC.
McKelvey’s communiqué continued by saying that
the tests at ICC “were successful. In the past, children
infected with HIV in ICC would die; these kids lived and are
now teenagers. According to Columbia, none of the ICC children
died as a result of the tests; while some experienced
reactions to the combination of medications used in the tests,
none suffered prolonged secondary effects,” assured McKelvey.
The accusations and belated protests stemmed, in part,
from a documentary aired by the BBC (British Broadcasting
Corporation)on December 12th, called “Guinea Pig Kids,” which
exposed “a racist and monstrous relationship among ACS, the
Catholic Archdiocese of New York, and GlaxoSmithKline, a
manufacturer of drugs that were combined. For several years
they used experimental medicines, some of them lethal, on
Black and Latino minors infected with HIV.”
This article appeared in Edition 151
of Voices That Must Be Heard.
Translation © 2004, IPA, all rights reserved. Included
by permisson of El Diario / La Prensa.
back
to top |
 |
Copyright (c) 2004 Independent
Press Association. All rights reserved. Unauthorized
redistribution is prohibited. |
 | |
|
![]() PUBLICATION INFO
El Diario / La Prensa 345 Hudson St., 13th Floor New York, NY
10014
(212) 807-4600
Sign
Up
Back to
Home
Advertise
More info
about papers like this
one
| | |
 |