Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06JAKARTA6027
2006-05-15 00:01:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Jakarta
Cable title:  

INDONESIA RACES TO BUILD BSL-3 LABS

Tags:  TBIO AMED CASC EAGR AMGT KFLU ID 
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VZCZCXRO3947
RR RUEHCHI RUEHDT RUEHHM
DE RUEHJA #6027/01 1350001
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 150001Z MAY 06
FM AMEMBASSY JAKARTA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 4135
INFO RUEHZS/ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN NATIONS
RUEHBY/AMEMBASSY CANBERRA 9450
RUEHOT/AMEMBASSY OTTAWA 1282
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO 9786
RHKAALA/11AF ELMENDORF AFB AK
RUEAUSA/DEPT OF HHS WASHDC
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHDC//NMJIC-J2//
RHHJJAA/JICPAC HONOLULU HI
RUERSHU/US MED INTEL CTR FT SAM HOUSTON TX
RUEBHGA/USDA FAS WASHINGTON DC 0025
RUEHBY/USDAO CANBERRA AS
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 07 JAKARTA 006027 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EAP/IET, A/MED, S/ES-O OES/FO, OES/IHA,OES/FO,
DEPT ALSO FOR ISN CTR/JRAO AND ISN CB/GSTEWART
DEPT PASS TO USDA/FAS/FAA/DYOUNG AND USDA/APHIS
DEPT ALSO PASS TO HHS/BSTEIGER AND ABHAT
DEPT ALSO PASS TO USSAID/ANE/CLEMENTS AND GH/CARROLL
PARIS FOR FAS/AG MINISTER COUNSELOR
CANBERRA FOR APHIS/DHANNAPEL
MANILA FOR APHIS
NSC FOR JMELINE
ROME FOR FAO
BANGKOK FOR RMO, CDC, USAID/RDM/A
USPACOM PASS TO JO7

E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/12/2016
TAGS: TBIO AMED CASC EAGR AMGT KFLU ID
SUBJECT: INDONESIA RACES TO BUILD BSL-3 LABS

REF: A. JAKARTA 3314

B. JAKARTA 1823

Classified By: EST&H OFFICER ANTHONY C. WOODS, REASON 1.5 (b) and (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 07 JAKARTA 006027

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EAP/IET, A/MED, S/ES-O OES/FO, OES/IHA,OES/FO,
DEPT ALSO FOR ISN CTR/JRAO AND ISN CB/GSTEWART
DEPT PASS TO USDA/FAS/FAA/DYOUNG AND USDA/APHIS
DEPT ALSO PASS TO HHS/BSTEIGER AND ABHAT
DEPT ALSO PASS TO USSAID/ANE/CLEMENTS AND GH/CARROLL
PARIS FOR FAS/AG MINISTER COUNSELOR
CANBERRA FOR APHIS/DHANNAPEL
MANILA FOR APHIS
NSC FOR JMELINE
ROME FOR FAO
BANGKOK FOR RMO, CDC, USAID/RDM/A
USPACOM PASS TO JO7

E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/12/2016
TAGS: TBIO AMED CASC EAGR AMGT KFLU ID
SUBJECT: INDONESIA RACES TO BUILD BSL-3 LABS

REF: A. JAKARTA 3314

B. JAKARTA 1823

Classified By: EST&H OFFICER ANTHONY C. WOODS, REASON 1.5 (b) and (d)


1. (C) Summary. The avian influenza (AI) threat has sparked
a race among Government of Indonesia (GOI) institutions to
build Biosafety Containment Level 3 laboratories (BSL-3
labs),ostensibly to perform AI sequencing and other
sophisticated procedures. At least seven GOI institutions
hope to construct BSL-3 labs in the near future, with perhaps
five having confirmed funding sources. With a single
exception, the seven institutions will require significant
technical assistance to operate their facilities safely and
securely. In paras 7-9, we recommend Washington agencies
consider offering appropriate assistance to facilities
planning BSL-3 labs. USG assistance to the planned BSL-3 lab
at the National Institute of Health Research and Development
(Litbangkes) would require special handling: we favor USG
assistance to this lab and the new Director General at
Litbangkes, but not any that would benefit Dr. Erna
Tresnaningsih, the Director of Litbangkes, Biomedical and
Pharmacy Research and Development Center and a vocal opponent
of the Naval Medical Research Unit,s (NAMRU-2) presence in
Indonesia. Paras 11-27 contain background information on the
seven institutions hoping to construct BSL-3 labs. End
Summary

BSL-3 Labs Sprouting Up Everywhere
--------------


2. (SBU) Although it has a modern pharmaceutical industry and
a relatively well developed medical establishment, Indonesia

only has three functioning BSL-3 labs. The private
Bandung-based pharmaceutical firm Medion International
operates two facilities essentially at the BSL-3 level, and
the state-owned pharmaceutical PT Biofarma operates a BSL-3
lab that focuses on efficacy testing of polio vaccines.


3. (SBU) This situation appears about to change. By our
count, at least seven GOI-linked institutions now seek to
build BSL-3 labs, with five reporting confirmed funding for
construction.

With Confirmed Funding:

--The National Institute of Health Research and Development
(Litbangkes) of the Ministry of Health (MOH);
--The Eijkmann Institute in Jakarta, a Jakarta-based
non-profit research institute conducting basic research in
medical molecular biology, tropical infectious diseases and
bimolecular engineering. It received its budget for a BSL-3
lab from the Ministry of Research and Technology.
--The Institute of Human Virology and Cancer (IHVCB-UI) at
the University of Indonesia.
--The Primate Research Center (PRC) at the Bogor Institute of
Agriculture (IPB) in Bogor, West Java, which has completed
construction of BSL-3 lab facility in cooperation with the
University of Washington for HIV/AIDS research.
--The Research Institute for Veterinary Science (Balitvet)
under the Ministry of Agriculture,s (MOA) Agency for
Agricultural Research and Development.

Other Institutions Planning BSL-3 labs:

--The National Veterinary Drug Assay Laboratory (NVDAL) in
Bogor, West Java, a MOA-linked lab that tests and certifies
the quality and safety of veterinary drugs in Indonesia and
documents biosecurity practices in animal medical research.

JAKARTA 00006027 002 OF 007


--The Tropical Disease Center (TDC) of the University of
Airlangga in Surabaya, East Java.


4. (C) This proliferation of planning for high-containment
research and diagnostics facilities has proceeded without a
coherent strategy for a national laboratory system that
Indonesia could afford over the long run. Little
understanding exist among the institutions seeking BSL-3 labs
re the considerable financial, human resources, safety, and
security implications of operating high biosafety facilities.
It remains unclear whether the GOI would adequately fund
them in out years or whether they could compete effectively
for grant funding. In addition, most experts, including some
in the MOH, agree that Indonesia does not need BSL-3
capability for AI pandemic preparedness; some fear that a
focus on building BSL-3 labs could divert vital resources
from the more critical needs of AI surveillance and case
investigation and containment.

Technical Assistance Needed
--------------


5. (C) The GOI effort to build up Indonesia,s BSL-3 labs
with Litbangkes playing a lead role seems a political
reality. In our judgment, each institution listed above,
except the Primate Research Center in Bogor, will require
significant technical assistance to operate properly a BSL-3
lab. Many of Indonesia,s labs, including those at the BSL-2
level, fail to observe minimum biosecurity and biosafety
protocols, especially in remote regions. The rush to build
as many as seven new BSL-3 labs therefore poses biosecurity
risks and challenges.


6. (SBU) The MOA and MOH have approached donors, including
the U.S., Japan, Singapore and Australia, for help in
building BSL-3 labs in the context of fighting AI and
preventing a possible pandemic. During a February 8 meeting
with the Ambassador, Coordinating Minister for Peoples,
Welfare Aburizal Bakrie repeatedly appealed for U.S. funds to
establish BSL-3 labs at the University of Indonesia and Bogor
Insitute of Agriculture. He said the GOI needs USD 10
million to fund the two labs.


7. (C) We see three compelling reasons to offer USG
assistance to the BSL-3 sector in Indonesia:

--Biosecurity issues: Early USG involvement through technical
and financial assistance would shape the process of building
such high-security and potential dangerous labs, increase
U.S. influence over the development of the sector, and
increase our access to information on the operation of such
facilities. U.S. assistance could help ensure that the
facility and its staff maintain competence in pathogen
security. By working with the facility during initial design,
construction, and equipping, communication will become
established between the lab and the USG that would prove
valuable in the future. Providing assistance would also give
us a more sophisticated understanding of which labs would
work on disease agents of interest.

--Scientific collaboration: Given Indonesia,s population,
geographical location in the tropics, and unparalleled
biodiversity, research here offers excellent opportunities
for scientific collaboration on infectious disease and other
issues.

--Supporting NAMRU-2: Our Naval Medical Research Unit
(NAMRU-2),based at the MOH, operates one of the most
sophisticated public sector laboratories in Indonesia. It

JAKARTA 00006027 003 OF 007


has played a central role in investigating and studying AI in
Indonesia. NAMRU-2 has faced consistent opposition from Dr.
Erna Tresnaningsih, who oversees all labs in Litbangkes and
has played a lead role in the agency,s plans to build a
BSL-3 lab. NAMRU-2, well-placed to collaborate with USG
agencies interested in assisting Indonesia,s BSL-3 labs,
could providing such assistance and demonstrate the benefit
of keeping NAMRU-2 in Indonesia, one of the Mission,s
priorities. The USG and GOI have begun negotiating an MOU on
NAMRU-2,s status, and one of the sticking points remains the
MOH,s insistence that NAMRU-2 build Litbangkes a lab.
Should we assist Litbangkes, we should work directly with Dr.
Triono Soendoro, the highly regarded new Director General at
Litbangkes, and avoid contact with Tresnaningsih. Soendoro
told NAMRU-2 the week of May 5 that he favors NAMRU,s
contributing long-term support and maintenance for the BSL-3
lab at Litbangkes.


8. (SBU) We have seen significant USG contact with the
institutions seeking BSL-3 labs. Dr. Gregory Stewart from
the State Department,s Office of Chemical and Biological
Weapons Threat Reduction held discussions with a range of GOI
and donor contacts on Indonesia,s plans to build BSL-3 labs
February 26 - March 3, 2006 (Ref A). Dr. Jason Rao, Senior
Program Coordinator for Nonproliferation of Weapons of Mass
Destruction Expertise (NWMDE) at the State Department, met a
similar group of individuals in March, including WHO Country
Representative Dr. Georg Peterson.


9. (C) We urge USG engagement with relevant Indonesian
agencies to educate them on building and operating BSL-3
facilities. The USG could offer equipment and training in
BSL-3 lab protocols and design, and fund the equipping and
maintenance of labs. We could gain long-term influence and
access by providing multi-year maintenance and support
contracts required to insure that a GOI BSL-3 lab supported
by the UGS runs safely and securely.


10. (U) Background information on institutions planning BSL-3
labs follows in paras 11-27.

Litbangkes
--------------


11. (SBU) The MOH,s BSL-3 lab would sit at the National
Institute of Health Research and Development (Litbangkes),
which shares its facilities with NAMRU-2 and focuses on
public health research. Dr. Erna Tresnaningsih, who oversees
all labs in Litbangkes, has touted her new responsibility for
developing the BSL-3 labs, declaring that Litbangkes would
build one by the end of 2006. The MOH,s Director of
Vector-borne Disease Eradication Hariadi Wibisono has stated
that a GOI-built BSL3-lab would match the standards of the
WHO reference lab in Hong Kong. (Comment: We do not see this
as credible given the current level of lab capability in
Indonesia).


12. (SBU) In recent meetings with Dr. Stewart (Feb 27) and
Dr. Rao,s team (March 23),Tresnaningsih said she hopes the
Litbangkes BSL-3 lab would become the main reference lab for
other planned BSL-3 labs. She said she has received about
USD 3 million from Parliament to build the lab by the end of

2006. The USG delegations visited the 6-floor building that
will house the BSL-3 lab. The facilities, while freshly
painted, remained devoid of furniture and equipment.
Tresnaningsih said a separate lift would exist to the sixth
floor requiring special security access. She also provided
the team a lay-out of the laboratory: about 42 square meters
(452 square feet),divided into two rooms, virology and

JAKARTA 00006027 004 OF 007


bacteriology.


13. (SBU) Dr. Tresnaningsih told Dr. Stewart that she needs a
USG-funded BSL-3 lab consultant immediately for about two
months to help with planning and basic construction. She
added that Litbangkes needs funds for equipment to outfit the
laboratory (e.g., PCR and Elisa capabilities). Dr. Erna
emphasized that the U.S. assistance should go directly to
Litbangkes, and not via other U.S. agencies like NAMRU-2.
Responding to our observation of NAMRU-2,s important role in
infectious diseases research (especially AI),Tresnaningsih
warned that she would build the lab with or without U.S.
help. She claimed that other countries including Japan and
Singapore stand ready to step into the breach. While she
pleaded with Dr. Stewart for help, Dr. Erna bluntly told Dr.
Rao,s team that since she already had funds to complete her
BSL3 lab by year,s end, she did not need foreign help.


14. (SBU) Litbangkes Secretary Dr. Titte K. Adimidjaja noted
her organization remains open to the possibility of receiving
additional funding to complete the lab, an admission that
current funds might prove insufficient. Tresnaningsih also
mentioned ongoing discussions with David Trudil from New
Horizons Diagnostics Corporation, who she hopes will help her
build the BSL-3 lab. Trudil visited Indonesia for the third
time 27-29 March to continue his consultations on an MOU with
senior MOH officials. Trudil told us March 27 that Dr.
Tresnaningsih had admitted her staff lacks the necessary
skills to operate a BSL-3 lab.


15. (SBU) Comment: Tresnaningsih,s obsession with speed
comes from her need to spend budgeted funds by the end of the
fiscal year, December 31 and her determination to exclude
NAMRU-2 from any possible involvement in the BSL-3 process.
She promised, however, that she would proceed cautiously with
the lab,s construction and operation, and admitted she needs
technical aid. Despite visits to BLS-3 labs and discussions
with lab experts in Singapore, Tresnaningsih did not seem to
understand much about BSL-3 labs and their financial, safety
and security implications.

The Eijkman Institute
--------------


16. (U) The Eijkman Institute for Molecular Biology in
Jakarta, inaugurated in 1995, a non-profit, GOI-funded
research institute, conducts basic research in medical
molecular biology, tropical infectious diseases and
bimolecular engineering. It falls under the line authority
of the State Ministry of Research and Technology, which
funded its BSL-3 budget, but reports directly to the
President. Eikjman has 200 scientists, several with post
doctoral degrees. In meetings with Dr. Stewart and Dr.
Rao,s team, institute director Dr. Marzuki welcomed possible
US assistance and confided that the GOI had given him USD 2.5
million to build a BSL-3 lab that would focus on emerging
disease research. He said core functions of the lab would
include conducting research on genomic and pathology; acting
as a back up for diagnostic and testing activities; and in an
emergency (e.g., a pandemic),supporting diagnostic capacity
for large samples.


17. (SBU) Dr. Mazurki said the institute,s planned lab would
be 50 square meters (538 square feet) in size, divided into
two labs, one for avian influenza and the other for
tuberculosis, a leading killer in Indonesia. He said that he
has guaranteed funding for 2-3 years to cover maintenance and
operational costs. Dr. Mazurki noted that Eijkman has a very
tight deadline to finish its lab by the end of 2006. Dr.

JAKARTA 00006027 005 OF 007


Herawati Sudoyo, Principal Research Fellow and Executive
Manager, told Dr. Rao that they would start building the BSL3
in March 2006. (Note: Our contacts confirmed May 11 that the
institute had in fact laid the foundation of the lab last
month). Dr. Mazurki also stressed that Eijkman's BSL-3 lab
would &back stop8 the Litbangkes BSL-3 lab, a comment that
reflects Litbangkes, presumed primacy in BSL-3 matters for
the GOI despite Eijkman,s superior capacity to manage labs.
Dr. Mazurki also observed that BSL-3 labs, now fashionable,
require above all well-trained people. He recognized that he
did not yet have qualified personnel to run a BSL-3 lab.


18. (SBU) Dr. Marzuki said that Eijkman needs experts
(preferably U.S.) to provide advice in building a BSL-3 lab
and warmly welcomed possible collaboration with NAMRU-2,
especially in engineering and technical training. Dr.
Marzuki proudly noted his labs, prowess, such as its DNA
tests that identified the Australian Embassy and Bali bombers
in 13 days. As a result, he continued, the police now rely
on Eijkman for forensic analysis and training for which it
received USD 1 million in special funding in 2006.


19. (SBU) Comment: We come away impressed by the quality of
Eijkman,s lab facilities and researchers. The facility
appears well-equipped and modern, and seems to follow good
laboratory safety and security practices. Dr. Stewart, Dr.
Rao, and other experts see Eijkman as the best prepared
Indonesian organization to absorb a major and costly upgrade
to BSL-3 standards. Its research into diseases of dangerous
pathogens, and work with various law enforcement agencies for
forensic investigations best justifies establishment of a
BSL-3 facility. Eijkman will likely continue to play an
important role in forensic investigations of potential
deliberate or accidental releases of dangerous pathogens.
End Comment.

Institute of Human Virology and Cancer (IIVCB)
-------------- -


20. (SBU) Coordinating Minister for Peoples, Welfare Bakrie
has told us several times he chose the University of
Indonesia,s (UI) IIVCB as one of two locations his Ministry
favors to develop a BSL-3 lab. UI and the University of
Maryland co-founded this facility with the primary goal of
researching the genomic aspects of the HIV virus in
Indonesia,s AIDS, patients and other infectious diseases,
including avian influenza. IIVCB,s Head Professor
Mardiastuti told USG visitors in late March that he saw the
facility as a &BSL-2 plus8 clinical microbiology lab, with
a staff that includes three professors, seven PhDs and nine
technicians. She said the lab focuses on SARS, tuberculosis
and dengue research and diagnostic training. The university
requires end-use agreements before shipping biological
materials out of the facility and asked for guidance on
appropriate inventory methods and an inspection checklist
that covers safety and biosecurity. Our contacts tell us the
BSL-3 lab will become operational in 5-6 months, perhaps
sooner. Dr. Mardiastuti said it would measure 45 square
meters (484 square feet). IIVCB scientists admit they need
expert advice and training.

IPB,s Primate Research Center
--------------


21. (U) The Primate Research Center (PRC) at the Bogor
Institute of Agriculture (IPB) in Bogor, West Java has a
newly completely U.S.- manufactured, BSL-3 modular facility
for HIV/AIDS research. PRC Director Dr. Joko Pamungkas told
us on March 21 that the University of Washington had just

JAKARTA 00006027 006 OF 007


completed a modular BSL-3 lab at the PRC for HIV primate
work. Pamungkas, accompanied by Dr. Michael Agy from the
Washington National Primate Center of the University of
Washington and Dr. William Morton from Paris Non-Human
Primate Inc, said a private company in Texas had built the
lab but WNPC would pay a private contractor to maintain it.


22. (U) Pamungkas said the PRC collaborates with three U.S.
institutions: the University of Washington Regional Primate
Research Center, the Oregon Regional Primate Research Center,
and the Bowman Gray School of Medicine at Wake Forest
University. The Center,s seeks to provide animal models for
AIDS-related research. According to Dondin Sajuthi, the
institute,s Director, the core mission of the facility is to
conserve Indonesia,s endemic primate species and optimize
its use in biomedical research. Principal Research Programs
include primate breeding and biomedical research using
primates as models for human diseases.

BALITVET
--------------


23. (U) The Research Institute for Veterinary Science
(Balitvet) remains the only veterinary research body in
Indonesia. It falls under the MOA,s Agency for Agricultural
Research and Development and reports to the Central Research
Institutes for Animal Science (CRIAS). Balivet,s mandate
includes prevention, diagnosis and treatment of animal
diseases. The institute has three public service units:
diagnostic services, culture collection, and a production
unit. The diagnostic unit serves as the national reference
laboratory for diagnosing animal diseases. The production
unit develops prototype animal vaccines for
commercialization. The institute has five research
departments: bacteriology, virology, toxicology and mycology,
pathology, and parasitology. It focuses on AI (H5N1),
anthrax, Newcastle, infectious bursal disease, and Gumboro.


24. (U) Balivet remains one of but four labs in Indonesia
authorized to diagnose or research anthrax, endemic in 17 of
Indonesia,s 26 provinces. The institute has a new building
intended to house a zoonotic research department, but a lack
of funding has meant the lab has not become functional. The
design of the facility favors an international standard BSL-2
lab, but seems to prohibit construction of a BSL-3 lab
without major redesign.


25. (SBU) Balivet Director Dr. Abdul Adjid told Dr. Stewart
in late March that his agency had received Rp 8 billion (USD
869,565) from the government to build a BSL-3 lab. Another
Balivet official told Dr. Rao that Balivet has received Rp 16
billion (USD 1.7 million) to buy equipment, and an extra
Rupiah 7 to 8 billion (USD 760,800) for miscellaneous costs.
Dr. Adjid added that the building that would house the
institute,s BSL-3 lab while basically finished would require
some modifications -- a fact we confirmed with a subsequent
visit. Dr. Adjid and Dr. Indrawati Sendow, Head of the
Virology Department and Project Manager of the BSL-3 lab,
warmly welcomed the possibility of technical and financial
help from Dr. Stewart and other USG entities. Indrawati
later admitted to Dr. Rao,s team that Balivet has had
problems with funding and obtaining references for
contractors and consultants. She also admitted that Balivet
is totally unprepared to operate a BSL-3 facility.

Bogor Animal Medical Center
--------------


26. (SBU) The GOI established the Veterinary Drug Assay

JAKARTA 00006027 007 OF 007


Laboratory (BBPMSOH) in Bogor, West Java in 2002 to ensure
the quality of veterinary drugs in Indonesia. The BBPMSOH
received financial aid from the MOA,s Directorate General of
Livestock Services and the Japan International Cooperation
Agency (JICA). The GOI upgraded the facility and changed its
name in December 2003 to the National Veterinary Drug Assay
Laboratory (NVDAL). Its main functions include: a) testing
and certifying the quality and safety of veterinary drugs
produced in and imported into Indonesia; and b) documenting
the biosecurity of animal medical research. Sources tell us
that BPMSOH wants to build a BSL-3 lab but we have few
details.

Tropical Disease Center
--------------


27. (SBU) The Tropical Disease Center (TDC) of the University
of Airlangga in Surabaya, East Java, established in 1998 with
Japanese funding, has six full-time and sixty part-time
researchers and 22 technicians. TDC Chairman Dr. Yoes
Prijatna Dachlan told us the TDC seeks to become a top global
research institute and a leader in science and technology in
the field of tropical medicine. The Japanese Society for
Promoting Sciences supports the TDC in its research and
training activities.
TDC officials told us that the university will cooperate with
Tokyo University to develop a BSL-3 Lab at its facility.
They added that UNAIR plans to seek cooperative funding from
the U.S. National Institute of Health (NIH). They said the
lab would do research on AI as well as other dangerous
infectious diseases such as the Ebola virus. The facilities
seemed in apparent disuse, but in good condition and likely
could accommodate a BSL-3 upgrade. The TDC,s medical staff
seems competent, but, like their counterparts in other labs,
would require training to handle a BSL-3 facility.

Pascoe
PASCOE