AIDS in Africa quotes
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[2008 Dec] Aids: An
Iatrogenic Depopulation Strategy? by Andrew Maniotis,
Ph.D., and Charles L. Geshekter, Ph.D.
In 2004, the total number of South African deaths (in a country then of
47 million) whose cause was officially listed as "HIV Diseases" was 13,220. That
number represented only 2.3% of ALL deaths in South Africa that year, a decrease
from 2.6% five years earlier.
........The sanctity of breast-feeding also has been
violated by the champions of the “HIV=AIDS” hypothesis. .....
the practice of brow beating African women to dissuade them from breast-feeding
and passing onto their infants “HIV-infection” increased the death-rate in
formula-fed infants some 20 times, compared to mother-infant pairs that weren’t
dissuaded from breast-feeding.
"The numbers have been greatly inflated. For example, the WHO/UNAIDS says that there has been 2.2 million AIDS deaths in Uganda so far, but the Ugandan Ministry of Health records a cumulative total of only 56,000 AIDS deaths since the beginning of the epidemic. The WHO's report is 33 times higher than the actual number of recorded, verified deaths. As of the end of 2001, official government bodies in the developing world have managed to account for only 7 percent of the cumulative AIDS deaths that the WHO/UNAIDS claim have occurred. The Russian Federation can only account for only 3 percent of the UNAIDS estimate of AIDS deaths. India has 2 percent of the UNAIDS estimate. China has only 1 percent."-- Dr. Rodney Richards [2003] Africa: Treating Poverty with Toxic Drugs By Liam Scheff
"In Africa, 50 percent of the population has no access to clean drinking water and the vast majority lack even basic medical care. And the response from multimillion dollar AIDS organization is to promote HIV testing, give out condoms and to implement treatment with deadly AIDS drugs. These drugs are similar or identical to chemotherapy drugs used in cancer treatment. They work by stopping cell growth. They kill your body from the inside out."--- Dr. Christian Fiala [2003] Africa: Treating Poverty with Toxic Drugs By Liam Scheff
Boehringer, a pharmaceutical company, has been doing studies in Uganda
with a drug called Nevirapine. The FDA refused approval of Nevirapine in the US
for so-called mother to child transmission because it's ineffective and has
deadly side effects, but this is exactly how the drug is being used in Africa -
on pregnant women and unborn children.
In one drug trial, 17 percent of patients taking Nevirapine developed liver
problems. A US health care worker taking Nevirapine had to have a liver
transplant to save his life as a result of drug toxicity. Five women in South
Africa died and dozens developed severe liver problems in a combination AIDS
drug trial that included Nevirapine.
The manufacturer's warning label for Nevirapine itself states that patients
taking the drug have experienced: “Severe, life-threatening and in some cases
fatal hepatotoxicity [liver damage],” and “severe, life-threatening skin
reactions, including fatal cases.”
These are the most toxic drugs known to medicine, and they're being applied to
the most vulnerable part of the population - pregnant mothers, unborn children
and newborns - all based on a faulty test, or no test at all, while their actual
food, shelter and water needs continue to be ignored. "---
Dr. Christian Fiala
[2003] Africa:
Treating Poverty with Toxic Drugs By Liam Scheff
What would actually help Africans is infrastructure development: proper
sanitation, safe water, basic medical care and plentiful, nutritive food. This
is simple, clear and logical. What's astounding is that the UN is recommending
just the opposite.
In 1999 the UNAIDS commission gave its official recommendations to a meeting of
finance ministers representing various African countries. The UN's exact
recommendations to African nations: to redirect billions of dollars from health,
infrastructure and rural development into AIDS - condoms, safe sex lectures and
deadly pharmaceuticals. This is not what these already suffering people need to
be healthy and successful. This is exactly how to propagate death, disease and
poverty.
Dr. Christian Fiala [2003] Africa:
Treating Poverty with Toxic Drugs By Liam Scheff
In Sub-Saharan African about 60 percent of the population
lives and dies without safe drinking water, adequate food or basic sanitation.
.....The report describes “heaps of unclaimed garbage”
among the crowded houses in the flood zones and “countless pools of water [that]
provide a breeding ground for mosquitoes and create a dirty environment that
favors cholera.”
“[L]atrines are built above water
streams. During rains the area residents usually open a hole to release feces
from the latrines. The rain then washes away the feces to streams, from where
the [area residents] fetch water. However, not many people have access to toilet
facilities. Some defecate in polythene bags, which they throw into the stream.”
They call these, “flying toilets.’’
The state-run Ugandan National
Water and Sewerage Corporation states that currently 55% of Kampala is provided
with treated water, and only 8% with sewage reclamation.
Most rural villages are without any
sanitary water source. People wash clothes, bathe and dump untreated waste up
and downstream from where water is drawn. Watering holes are shared with animal
populations, which drink, bathe, urinate and defecate at the water source.
Unmanaged human waste pollutes water with infectious and often deadly bacteria.
Stagnant water breeds mosquitoes, which bring malaria. Infectious diarrhea,
dysentery, cholera, TB, malaria and famine are the top killers in Africa. But in
1985, they became AIDS.
The public service announcements
that run on VH1 and MTV, informing us of the millions of infected, always fail
to mention this. I don’t know what we’re supposed to do with the information
that 40 million people are dying and nothing can be done. I wonder why we
wouldn’t be interested in building wells and providing clean water and sewage
systems for Africans. Given our great concern, it would seem foolish not to
immediately begin the “clean water for Africa” campaign. But I’ve never heard
such a thing mentioned.
The UN recommendations for Africa
actually demand the opposite –“billions of dollars” taken out of “social funds,
education and health projects, infrastructure [and] rural development” and
“redirected” into sex education (UNAIDS, 1999). No clean water, but plenty of
condoms. ----The Hidden Face of HIV – Part 1 By Liam Scheff
"The numbers have been greatly inflated. For example, the WHO/UNAIDS says that there has been 2.2 million AIDS deaths in Uganda so far, but the Ugandan Ministry of Health records a cumulative total of only 56,000 AIDS deaths since the beginning of the epidemic. The WHO's report is 33 times higher than the actual number of recorded, verified deaths. As of the end of 2001, official government bodies in the developing world have managed to account for only 7 percent of the cumulative AIDS deaths that the WHO/UNAIDS claim have occurred. The Russian Federation can only account for only 3 percent of the UNAIDS estimate of AIDS deaths. India has 2 percent of the UNAIDS estimate. China has only 1 percent."-- Dr. Rodney Richards [2003] Africa: Treating Poverty with Toxic Drugs By Liam Scheff [See BBC]