Update on the Tetanus/Sterilisation Issue in Kenya.



My friend Ruari McCallion has been keeping tabs on developments in this story. He reports:

"He did not say this was a smoking gun, but...“Somebody seems to have loaded it”.

UNICEF 'categorically denies' combining contraceptive chemical with tetanus injection; in the immortal words of Mandy Rice-Davies, "They would say that, wouldn't they?". The samples that were finally obtained by the Kenyan doctors are now going to be tested in the UK, which could help to make things a bit clearer.

A Dr. Giuseppe Benagiano asserted that WHO does not test anything secretly.Benagiano, a Dean of the faculty of Gynecology and Obstetrics at the University of Rome and former head of the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics, maintains that “birth control vaccines do not exist”, and that research in this area has persistently failed.

Actually, birth control vaccines have been in widespread use for a couple of decades. I wonder if he is aware of them? Here's a quick guide:

http://www.nhs.uk/…/cont…/Pages/contraceptive-injection.aspx

He might also be interested in this recent news:

http://www.reuters.com/…/us-pfizer-gates-contraception-idUS…

Be that as it may, I was discussing with a friend how to see if there was any truth in the rumours and allegations about previous 'experiments' with tetanus/HCG contraception drives. I suggested that the mechanism claimed for the alleged HCG process is that newly-fertilised zygotes (embryos) are rejected from the womb wall when they attempt to implant. In that case, results would not show up as spontaneous abortions or even noticeable miscarriages. One would have to look at wider data - specifically, live births and, as a consequence, birth rates.

Again, no smoking gun - but definitely something interesting.

The Philippines shows a significant decline in birth rate in the period following the tetanus campaign in the mid-late 1990s, with a sharp uptick at a time when an 'untreated' cohort of young women entered typical childbearing age - and then reversion to a steady decline.

http://www.indexmundi.com/g/g.aspx?c=rp&v=25

Raw data, in the form of recordings of live births, can be found here:

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/…/Demographics_of_the_Philippines…

Another country supposedly subjected to an external population reduction drive was Honduras. The information is not as easily accessible but it can be found, and a similar picture emerges.

Look at the second table on page 38:

https://www.guttmacher.org/pu…/2006/…/13/rib_Honduras_en.pdf

and at this graph:

http://www.indexmundi.com/g/g.aspx?c=ho&v=25

Again, a picture of significant and even sharp decline in live births and timing coincident with the reported tetanus campaign in the early 2000s. Not as marked as the Philippines but there is an apparently anomalous bulge upwards followed by a sharper rate of decline.

These numbers are not definitive proof; there could be other reasons for them. However, it would be helpful to know what those other reasons might be - or, even better, what they actually are.

There are, at least, questions that it would be good for UNICEF and WHO to answer and data that could benefit from explanation. It may be that the Kenyan bishops have added 2 and 2 and made 5. Those who made the same allegations about the Philippines and Honduras, ditto.

Why are people getting so excited and why are they prepared to believe these allegations? The answer is that, in recent years, a lot of 'aid' efforts have arrived with strings - they could be political; they could be about reorganising the economy to make it more open (to exploitation); 'population reduction' has been a more recent call. The perception is one of neocolonialism - that the West is imposing its ideas and mores (economic, social and sexual) on the emerging economies. It's nothing new; the perception from Africa, SE Asia and S America is that the Imperialist powers (European and N American) have been doing that sort of stuff for centuries - it's only the form that changes. Suspicion becomes a natural reaction - more than that: it's about self-preservation.

The idea that Ebola is a man-made western conspiracy is risible. The possibility that the West's drive to impose birth control on the Third World is being manifested in an immunisation campaign is much less so, sadly.

Which is not to say that the Kenyan allegations are proven. However, openness, transparency and a good deal less neocolonialism would all be good ideas and maybe even help to allay suspicions raised by unnecessary levels of secrecy, of evasion and unexplained changes in longstanding practices.

https://c-fam.org/…/c-fam-unicef-denies-sneaking-birth-con…/

Comments

  1. Mark, my sincere apologies for an error. I was advised in good faith that the alleged HCG 'vaccine' tests in Latin America in the 1990s were in Mexico and Honduras, and possibly Peru. In fact, they were in Mexico and Nicaragua (as well as possibly Peru).

    The birth data in Honduras was less clear than in the Philippines, as I said. I am trying to find accurate records for Nicaragua but it's proving to be a bit challenging - which is a euphemism for 'difficult'. I expect it will be very easy to locate, in fact, but I simply haven't got the right button, yet.

    My sincere apologies for the misinformation. Just as well I didn't go so far as to claim full-blown conspiracy, eh?

    Anyway, here are references to more source material, including reports apparently published in learned journals:

    "Clinical profile and Toxicology Studies on Four Women Immunized with Pr-B-hCG-TT," Contraception, February, 1976, pp. 253-268.

    "Observations on the antigenicity and clinical effects of a candidate antipregnancy vaccine: B-subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin linked to tetanus toxoid," Fertility and Sterility, October 1980, pp. 328-335.

    "Phase 1 Clinical Trials of a World Health Organisation Birth Control Vaccine," The Lancet, 11 June 1988, pp. 1295-1298. "Vaccines for Fertility Regulation," Chapter 11, pp. 177-198, Research in Human Reproduction, Biennial Report (1986-1987), WHO Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (WHO, Geneva 1988).

    "Anti-hCG Vaccines are in Clinical Trials," Scandinavian Journal of Immunology, Vol. 36, 1992, pp. 123-126.

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