Institute of Applied Biochemistry
The Institute of Applied Biochemistry is a research laboratory and bioweapons production facility located in Omutninsk, Kirov Oblast.[1] For a time in the 1980s, the facility was directed by Ken Alibek.[2]
Wild rodents like rats that live in the woods outside the factory are chronically infected with the "Schu-4 military strain" of tularemia due to a "small leak" in a basement pipe found in the twilight years of the USSR to be dripping a viral suspension into the ground.[2]
References
- ^ "Omutninsk". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
- ^ a b Preston, Richard (9 March 1998). "THE BIOWEAPONEERS". pp. 52-65. The New Yorker.
- v
- t
- e
- Smallpox
- Anthrax
- Plague
- Botulism
- Brucellosis
- Glanders
- Q fever
- Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B
- Tularemia
- VEE
- Marburg
- Wheat stem rust
- Rice blast
- Project Bonfire
- Project Factor
- Biopreparat
- Stepnogorsk Scientific and Technical Institute
- Institute of Ultra Pure Biochemical Preparations
- VECTOR
- Institute of Applied Biochemistry
- Kirov bioweapons production facility
- Zagorsk smallpox production facility
- Berdsk bioweapons production facility
- Obolensk bioweapons research facility
- Sverdlovsk-19 [ru]
- Aralsk-7 (Vozrozhdeniya Island)
- Institute of Virus Preparations
- Poison laboratory of the Soviet secret services
- Nikolay Timofeev-Ressovsky
- Kanatjan Alibekov
- Vladimir Pasechnik
- Sergei Popov
- Yuri Ovchinnikov
- Igor Domaradsky [ru]
- Nikolai Ustinov
- Alexander Catsch
- Pyotr Burgasov [ru]
This article about a Russian building or structure is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e