Anti-asbestos activists in Malaysia and Canada say a global asbestos lobby group
has hired the Washington based APCO Worldwide public relations company to
persuade the Malaysian government not to ban chrysotile asbestos.
APCO
Worldwide was hired by the Philip Morris tobacco company in the early 1990s to
set up a group called The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition, after the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency classified secondhand smoke as a known human
carcinogen. The coalition's mission was to dismiss concern about second-hand
smoke as "junk science," and to fight anti-smoking regulations.
Kathleen
Ruff, an anti-asbestos activist and human rights adviser with the Ottawa-based
Rideau Institute, sent a letter to APCO Worldwide president Margery Kraus on
Thursday, demanding the company inform the government of Malaysia that it was
hired by the International Chrysotile Association.
She said APCO brought
Dr. David Bernstein, a Switzerland-based toxicologist who has produced studies
on smoking funded by the tobacco industry as well as studies on chrysotile
asbestos funded by the asbestos industry, to Malaysia to persuade the government
the product can be used safely.
"The scientific consensus is clear - just
as it is on tobacco - that all forms of asbestos, including chrysotile asbestos,
cause mesothelioma, lung cancer, other cancers and asbestosis and that safe use
is not possible," Ruff writes in her letter to Kraus.
"Only lobby
organizations that have a financial interest in selling asbestos claim that
asbestos can be safely used, just as the lobby organizations acting on behalf of
the tobacco industry have denied the clear science on tobacco
harm."
Krauss was unavailable for comment Thursday, an assistant at her
Washington office said. Elizabeth Wolf, APCO's senior associate in corporate
relations, declined to comment in an email message, saying: "APCO does not
comment on client work as a matter of company policy."
A spokesperson for
Baljit Chadha of Balcorp Ltd., the lead proponent of the Jeffrey Mine expansion,
said the comparison to the tobacco lobby is unmerited.
"Frankly it is an
unfair comparison because there is no socio-economic benefit to the tobacco
industry, whereas asbestos sheets are used to build housing in the Third World,"
John Aylen said. "Both products (tobacco and asbestos) are carcinogens and
everybody admits that, but safe handling of asbestos does not present a risk
along the supply chain or to the end user."
Clément Godbout, who heads
the Montreal-based Chrysotile Institute and is listed in Quebec's corporation
registry as the first administrator of the International Chrysotile Association,
said he sees nothing wrong with an industry lobby group, for tobacco or
asbestos, making its case to a government considering a ban of its
product.
"Of course we are concerned about the international campaign to
ban chrysotile, especially in Quebec, and of course we have an association that
is making efforts to convince governments not to embark on a ban," he said,
adding he would "not be surprised" if the ICA had hired APCO to talk to the
Malaysian government.
"We are not going to just let one side continue to
present its arguments. We will take our turn to dissect the message to ensure
they hear the whole story. Nobody is saying (asbestos) has no problems and you
can put it in your coffee and drink it, but we say it can be used
safely."
By MICHELLE LALONDE, Montreal Gazette, September 30, 2011
http://www.montrealgazette.com/agency+used+tobacco+firm+hired+asbestos+group/5480322/story.html#ixzz1ZSUEW9Yx
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