The Kinabureau (or Kina Bureau) was a Dutch organization that regulated the trade in cinchona bark, founded in 1913 and headquartered in the Dutch capital of Amsterdam.Het Kinabureau was aanvankelijk gevestigd aan het Rokin, (zie de Naamlijst voor den Telefoondienst, Amsterdam: Kam-Kw, 1915) en later op De Lairessestraat 142 (zie de Telefoongids van Nederland 1950, Amsterdam: Kettner t/m Kinotechniek).
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Gearchiveerd op 22 March 2023. Cinchona bark was mainly important for the production of quinine, at that time just about the only effective remedy against malaria. The Kinabureau was part of a cartel of producers of cinchona bark and quinine.E.M. Beekman, Paradijzen van weleer: Koloniale literatuur uit Nederlands-Indië, 1600-1950. Prometheus, 1998, p. 586.
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Gearchiveerd op 10 August 2022. About 90% of the cinchona bark was produced in the then Dutch East Indies, "Een kina-onderneming der Italiaansche regeering", De Sumatra Post, 8 oktober 1925 mainly on the Pengalengan plateau near Bandung. The vast majority of the cinchona producers were members of the organization, and they were obliged to deliver all their cinchona bark to the Bureau, at prices set by the Bureau. "De kina-quaestie", Algemeen Handelsblad, 27 December 1917 This effectively created a Dutch-Indonesian monopoly on the production of anti-malaria medicines.
In 1939, approximately 7,000 tons of cinchona bark and 180 tons of quinine were exported from the Dutch East Indies. "Kina-uitvoer van Ned.-Indië", Het nieuws van den dag voor Nederlandsch-Indië, Batavia, 18 March 1939. During World War II, the Dutch East Indies were occupied by Japan and no cinchona bark or quinine was exported from there to the West. The cinchona plantations were kept intact by the Japanese, because they needed the quinine themselves.De Jong, Het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden in de Tweede Wereldoorlog, deel 11 b, p. 516 In an attempt to compensate for the loss of supply, plantations were set up in the Belgian Congo, among other places. After the war the Kinabureau tried to set up a joint arrangement with the Congolese plantations, which failed due to the unstable situation in the Congo. In 1957, the plantations in Indonesia (which had become independent of the Netherlands) were nationalized, which further reduced the importance of the Kinabureau.
The importance of cinchona production and the Kinabureau also declined due to the development of new, synthetic drugs. As early as 1928, IG Farben had found an effective synthetic antimalarial drug, but this had serious side effects. Two other synthetic drugs, primaquine and chloroquine, were developed during the Second World War. These played an important role in the fight against malaria until the 1990s.
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