Avatar photo

Leigh Turner

Ambassador to Austria and UK Permanent Representative to the United Nations and other International Organisations in Vienna

Part of UK in Austria

5th May 2017 Vienna, Austria

Zika mosquitoes and tsetse flies in Austria: how IAEA is fighting disease and malnutrition

Hundreds of anopheles mosquitoes are drinking warm blood.  Nearby, thousands of fruit fly larvae are tucking into a tasty compote of fruit, writhing, munching and even, alarmingly, jumping in the air.  In another part of the lab tsetse flies – hardest to breed – sit solemnly in mesh containers, from which they too can drink fresh blood.

I’m at the IAEA’s Seibersdorf laboratory, about an hour outside Vienna.  In addition to looking at “safeguards” work related to non-proliferation (ie making sure that civil nuclear facilities are not doing anything inappropriate which could lead to development of military nuclear capabilities) we are here to look at the “nuclear sciences and applications” labs, where nuclear techniques are applied to issues such as insect pest control; health applications such as radiotherapy; and animal health, eg making sure that valuable livestock do not suffer from debilitating sleeping sickness.

This matters because while many people understand well the focus of the IAEA on counter-proliferation, the Agency’s huge amount of good work addressing the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is less well known.  For example, those show-stealing and occasionally somewhat creepy mosquitoes, fruit flies and tsetse flies are used to produce sterile males. When this technique is replicated in-country, and sterile males are released into the wild, it can help to bring under control insect populations which are responsible for spreading the zika virus; harming cattle health in some of the poorest countries of the world; or disrupting agricultural production.

The UK supports the work at Seibersdorf and has recently provided funding towards the much-needed renovation of the laboratories, including towards a new building which will house new radiotherapy equipment for cancer treatment. Indeed, a new lab partly funded by the UK is rising right now in Seibersdorf.  All of this is important because the work carried out in these labs will play a role in achieving all of our shared aims on the SDGs.

I look forward to visiting the labs – including the insects – again.  I hope by then I will have stopped dreaming about the blood-sucking denizens of Seibersdorf.

1 comment on “Zika mosquitoes and tsetse flies in Austria: how IAEA is fighting disease and malnutrition

  1. I am Shah Fahad a senior research major at Zoology department, Government College University Faisalabad, Pakistan. I am the 1st person in my country to work on SIT to eradicate the Dengue vector Aedes aegypti. I have worked on the above mentioned project in 2012 in province Khyber PakhtoonKhwa (KPK) Pakistan. I can provide my services if needed. Feel free to contact me.

Comments are closed.

About Leigh Turner

I hope you find this blog interesting and, where appropriate, entertaining. My role in Vienna covers the relationship between Austria and the UK as well as the diverse work of…

I hope you find this blog interesting and, where appropriate, entertaining. My role in Vienna covers the relationship between Austria and the UK as well as the diverse work of the UN and other organisations; stories here will reflect that.

About me: I arrived in Vienna in August 2016 for my second posting in this wonderful city, having first served here in the mid-1980s. My previous job was as HM Consul-General and Director-General for Trade and Investment for Turkey, Central Asia and South Caucasus based in Istanbul.

Further back: I grew up in Nigeria, Exeter, Lesotho, Swaziland and Manchester before attending Cambridge University 1976-79. I worked in several government departments before joining the Foreign Office in 1983.

Keen to go to Africa and South America, I’ve had postings in Vienna (twice), Moscow, Bonn, Berlin, Kyiv and Istanbul, plus jobs in London ranging from the EU Budget to the British Overseas Territories.

2002-6 I was lucky enough to spend four years in Berlin running the house, looking after the children (born 1992 and 1994) and doing some writing and journalism.

To return to Vienna as ambassador is a privilege and a pleasure. I hope this blog reflects that.