Rabu, 16 September 2009

CLARICS, MINISTER AT ODD OVER 'SWINE' VACCINE

By Andi Abdussalam

Jakarta, June 25 (ANTARA) - The Indonesian Council of Ulema (MUI) and the health minister are now at odds over a requirement for hajj pilgrims to take an anti-meningitis vaccine which allegedly contains a swine enzyme before traveling to the Holy Land.

        "Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari's statement that MUI has no right to decide whether meningitis vaccine is 'halal' (allowed in Islam) or 'haram' (banned) can mislead and create unrest among Muslims," MUI Chairman Amidhan, said on Sunday.

        According to the MUI chairman, the health minister as a state official should not have made the statement as it would create unrest among Muslims. The minister made the statement at a meeting of the Aisyiyah women wing of the Muhammadiyah Muslim organization in Yoyakarta on Saturday. "I read her statement in the running text of a television broadcast Sunday morning," Amidhan said.

        MUI has the authority to decide whether or not a product is halal or haram based on Law No. 7 / 1996 on Food. One of its articles clearly stipulates that the halal certification of a product would be issued by MUI.

        MUI is equipped with two institutions in this case. One is the Institute for Assessment of Food, Drug and Cosmetics (LPPOM) and the other one is the Commission on Edicts and Legal Affairs.

        "Before MUI decides whether a product is halal or haram, its team will check it in the field and test it in a laboratory, the results of which would be taken to and discussed with the edict commission. We have the experience to handle such a problem for 20 years," Amidhan said.

        At the Aisyiyah meeting, Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari said that Indonesian would-be hajj pilgrims were obliged to receive a meningitis vaccine before they left for Saudi Arabia because the Saudi government had decided to oblige pilgrims to have one.

        "The Saudi government obliges all hajj pilgrims to have meningitis vaccine in order to protect them from cerebral membrane inflammation," the minister said.

        She was responding to a rejection by a hajj pilgrim organizer group to provide meningitis vaccine as the vaccine was suspected to contain swine enzyme.

        The minister said that the requirement set by the Saudi government to have meningitis vaccine for would-be hajj pilgrims was final. Pilgrims should be injected with the vaccine if they wanted to travel to Saudi Arabia.

        "I have told the Saudi health minister about the pros and cons on the use of the meningitis vaccine which was suspected to contain swine enzyme but the Saudi government maintained its policy and required meningitis vaccination for hajj pilgrims," the minister said.

        Therefore, Indonesia's would-be hajj pilgrims should receive meningitis vaccine injection in the first place before they could depart to Saudi Arabia. Without taking the meningitis vaccine, a would-be hajj pilgrim would not be allowed to go to the Holy Land.

        "So far, there is only one kind of meningitis vaccine used by hajj pilgrims. This vaccine is produced by a US pharmacy. So far, no other pharmacy has produced meningitis vaccine," the minister said.

        The minister said that the US company was going to produce another type of meningitis vaccine. They claimed the new product was an innovative version of the previous one. "Therefore, the price of the new vaccine which was claimed to be free from pig enzyme is far higher than that of the previous vaccine," the minister said.

        With regard to the present vaccine, the minister said that the institution that had the right to assess the substance of the vaccine was the ministry of health, not the MUI. So, MUI had neither right nor authority or competence to assess the substance of the meningitis vaccine and decided that it was halal or haram.

        "MUI may decide that swine is halal or haram, but as far as a vaccine is concerned, the institution which has the right and competence to assess its substance is the health ministry," Minister Supari said.

        However, it was reported that MUI had received the very information on the swine enzyme substance in the meningitis vaccine from the health ministry itself, namely its Advisory Council on Health and Religious Legal Affairs (MPKS).

        Amidhan said that MUI had the information from the MPKS which held a meeting with the meningitis vaccine producer. It was learnt from the results of a meeting between MPKS and the vaccine producer Glaxo Smith Kline (GSK), that the vaccine contained swine enzyme. The producer even admitted that the meningitis vaccine contained swine enzyme.

        "That is why we say that the vaccine is haram," the MUI chairman said.

        MUI has sent a letter to the Saudi government with regard to the requirement for pilgrims to have meningitis vaccine. The highest Islamic regulating council took the step because all parties involved in the organization of hajj pilgrimage in the country had agreed that the vaccine contained pig substance.

        "We are waiting for a response from the Saudi government. However, if the Saudi government insists on its decision to require pilgrims to take meningitis vaccine, then we will use it based on the principle of emergency. Of course this would continue to create unrest," Amidhan said. ***4*** (T.A014/A/HAJM/14:00/A/O001)

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