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Doubts cast over ‘attacks’ on Afghan schoolgirls
AFP
KABUL
ALLEGED poisonings of Afghan schoolgirls by Taliban insurgents regularly make headlines, but there are signs the incidents could be cases of mass hysteria, say specialists in the field.
In a widely-reported ‘attack’ last week, more than 120 girls from a school in northern Takhar province were rushed to hospital after scores fainted and others complained of feeling ill.
Local officials accused the Taliban who banned schooling for girls while in power from 1996 to 2001 of contaminating the air with an unidentified ‘toxic powder’.
In two other cases this year alone a ‘gas attack’ and ‘poisoned water’ have been blamed for mass fainting episodes in other schools.
The children are always taken to hospital and usually released shortly afterwards, with authorities vowing to submit samples taken from the girls for analysis.
Usually, nothing more is heard. But enquiries have found that neither the government nor NATO’s military in Afghanistan have discovered proof of poisoning.
Instead an international expert said the cases had “all the earmarks” of mass hysteria.
“So far no evidence or any traces of any kind of poison or gas have been found” in government tests, interior ministry spokesman Sayed Edayat Hafiz said. A spokesman for NATO’s International Security Assistance Force said that at Kabul’s request it had collected samples after 200 students were recently reported ill at a high school in the eastern province of Khost.
“Initial laboratory tests of multiple air, water and material samples were negative for any organic compounds like poisons or other toxic material,” said Lieutenant Colonel Jimmie Cummings.
“Further tests continue, but at this point it is unlikely that any foreign substance caused the reported symptoms.” With no physical cause established, Robert Bartholomew, a sociologist and author, told the poisoning scares had “all the earmarks of mass psychogenic illness, also known as mass hysteria”. Bartholomew, who is based in New Zealand, said he had collected more than 600 cases of mass hysteria in schools dating back to 1566 in Europe, “and the Afghan episode certainly fits the pattern”.
“The tell-tale signs of psychogenic illness in these Afghan outbreaks include the preponderance of schoolgirls; the conspicuous absence of a toxic agent; transient, benign symptoms; rapid onset and recovery; plausible rumours; the presence of a strange odour; and anxiety generated from a wartime backdrop.” He noted there was a history of similar cases in combat zones, listing examples from the Palestinian territories in 1983 to Soviet Georgia in 1989 and Kosovo in 1990.
The Afghan incidents came “within a larger social panic involving the fear of Taliban insurgents”, he added.
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