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Workers At U.S. Army Lab to Get Polygraphs in Anthrax Probe

Anthrax strikes again at the World Bank

WASHINGTON, May 21 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Still unknown is who sent the deadly anthrax laced letters to prominent Americans last year. Now the U.S. government is to administer lie-detector tests to as many as 200 current and former employees of U.S. military laboratories as part of its investigation into the attacks, ABC News reported Monday. 

The television network quoted sources as saying investigators were hoping to rule out the laboratories as the source of the anthrax used in the attacks. 

ABC said among the laboratories targeted by the probe is Fort Detrick in Maryland, which specializes in the study of biological threats and endemic diseases of military concern. 

Five people died in the United States last year after envelopes containing anthrax spores were mailed to the U.S Congress and members of the media, disrupting mail service and temporarily shutting down Congressional offices. 

Early on in the attacks, reports circulated that the anthrax attacks may be tied in with the attacks on September 11. However, shortly thereafter, the FBI sent out a profile of the suspected attacker, saying he was most likely male, living in the U.S., and using the time immediately after September 11 to send out the letters to divert attention away from himself. 

The FBI has asserted that the anthrax attacks were in no way connected to the attacks on September 11. 

Investigators believe the anthrax used in the attacks was produced in the United States, reportedly from stocks originating at Fort Detrick.

Investigators say they will concentrate on those workers who have knowledge and experience in the handling of the deadly substance as well as those who have access to it.

About 1,200 employees of the World Bank located in Washington D.C. were evacuated Monday and will remain home for the next couple of days after a machine testing mail for anthrax sounded an alarm, a bank official said.  

"A small batch of mail this morning tested positive for anthrax," said Caroline Enstey, a spokeswoman for the bank.  

   

She said a subsequent, more thorough, test of the mail came in negative, but bank management still decided to send the employees working in a World Bank annex on the corner of 18th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue home early.  

The building that houses the bank's African division and the World Bank Institute, its training arm, was vacated at about at 4:00 pm (2000 GMT), Enstey said.  

"It's very much a precautionary measure," she said. "They were told to work at home for the next couple of days."  

The suspicious mail, meanwhile, has been sent for a third and even more sophisticated test to make sure it is clean of anthrax, according to Enstey. 

 

   

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