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COMMENTARY OF THE DAY
By
Robert Namer
Voice Of America
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July 13, 2026

     Two foreign nationals working for the National Institutes of Health are facing criminal charges for allegedly smuggling in mpox into the U.S.  They should receive  harsh sentences.

     Mpox, also known as monkeypox, can spread to people via close contact with infected animals, but also via sexual transmission between two people, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  On Jan. 25, Dutch national Vincent Munster, 53, the chief of the virology section at the NIH Rocky Mountain Laboratory in Montana, and Cameroonian national Claude Kwe, 38, a research fellow working under Mr. Munster, traveled to Detroit from the Republic of the Congo, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Michigan said.

     At the time, the Republic of the Congo was dealing with an mpox outbreak. Federal prosecutors said the two men told Customs and Border Protection that a black case they had with them contained equipment for diagnostics and testing.   The black case instead contained 113 vials held in coolers made of Styrofoam. Out of the 20 vials tested by the time the complaint was filed against Mr. Munster and Mr. Kwe last Tuesday, 17 contained deactivated mpox, one contained chickenpox and the other two contained human DNA, federal prosecutors said.

     “These NIH experts apparently broke our laws by smuggling viral pathogens on a packed commercial airplane from an outbreak in the Republic of Congo. Let that sink in,” said U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan Jerome Gorgon Jr. Mr. Munster and Mr. Kwe each faces charges of conspiracy to smuggle monkeypox into the U.S. and giving false statements to federal law enforcement, federal prosecutors said.

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