Another mechanism the
Gates Foundation employs to influence the WHO is the
Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE), the
principal advisory group to the WHO for vaccines.
SAGE
is a board of fifteen people, legally required to
disclose any possible conflicts of interest.
During a
recent
virtual meeting, half of the board’s members who did so
listed Gates Foundation connections as possible
conflicts of interests.
The Foundation’s
influence in the international health arena goes well
beyond the WHO. A 2017 analysis of 23 global health
partnerships
revealed
that seven relied entirely on Gates Foundation funding
and another nine listed the Foundation as its top
donor.
As the UK-based NGO
Global Justice Now
noted,
“the Foundation’s influence is so pervasive that many
actors in international development which would
otherwise critique the policy and practice of the
Foundation are unable to speak out independently as a
result of its funding and patronage.”
“The World Bank and
the IMF look like midgets in front of the Gates
Foundation, in terms of power and influence,” Dr.
Vandana Shiva remarked to The Grayzone.
Molding the media
The Foundation has
also directed its wealth towards influencing news
coverage of global health policy – and to perhaps
suppress criticism of its more unsavory activities as
well. It has donated
millions
to major media outlets, including NPR, PBS, ABC, BBC, Al
Jazeera, The Daily Telegraph, The Financial Times,
Univision, and The Guardian. In fact, the Guardian’s
entire ‘Global
Development’
section was made possible through a
partnership
with the Gates Foundation.
The Gates Foundation
has also invested millions in journalism training and in
researching effective ways of crafting media narratives.
According to
The Seattle Times,
“experts coached in Gates-funded programs write columns
that appear in media outlets from The New York Times to
The Huffington Post, while digital portals blur the line
between journalism and spin.”
In 2008, the
Communications Chief for PBS NewsHour
Rob Flynn
explained, “there are not a heck of a lot of things you
could touch in global health these days that would not
have some kind of Gates tentacle.” This was around the
time when the Foundation gave the NewsHour $3.5 million
to establish a dedicated production unit to report on
important global health issues.
Mickey Huff, the
president of the Media Freedom Foundation, told The
Grayzone that the Gates Foundation exerts influence in a
way that is typical for foundations working through PR
firms, grants, and endowments of professors. “In short,”
Huff said, “Edward Bernays would be proud of the
achievements of this type of propaganda.”
It is no wonder
glowing coverage of the foundation is so common in
mainstream media, or that its more unsavory activities
in the Global South get so little attention.
Deadly Double Standards
The Gates Foundation
has helped engineer global health policy for poor
countries for over twenty years, working mainly in
Africa and South Asia. Its close relationship with the
drug industry seems to have colored that work.
While the Foundation’s
mission statement reads, “we see equal value in all
lives,” an exploration of this recent history proves
otherwise. The Foundation appears to see the global
south as both a dumping ground for drugs deemed too
unsafe for the developed world, and a testing ground for
drugs not yet determined to be safe enough for the
developed world.
The so-called
“flagship of Bill Gates’ / WHO African vaccine program”
is the diphtheria tetanus pertussis (DTP) vaccine. It’s
a bundle of three immunization shots given to virtually
every child on the African continent, but not currently
administered in the U.S. nor in most other developed
nations.
As far back as 1977, a
study published by British medical professionals in
The Lancet
established
that the risks of the whole-cell pertussis jab (used in
the DTP vaccine) are greater than the risks associated
with contracting wild pertussis. After mounting evidence
linking the drug to
brain
damage,
seizures
and even
death,
the US and
other
Western countries
phased
it out in the 1990s and replaced it with a safer version
(called DTaP) that did not contain the whole pertussis
cell.
However, African
nations are still being financially
incentivized
to continue using the out-of-date, deeply dangerous DTP
vaccine, with GAVI making DTP a
priority
for African children.
Shockingly, a 2017
study funded by the Danish government
concluded
that more African children were dying at the hands of
the deadly DTP vaccine than by the diseases it
prevented. The researchers examined data from Guinea
Bissau and concluded that boys were dying at almost
quadruple (3.93) the rate of those who had not received
the shot, while girls suffered almost 10 times (9.98)
the death rate.
Yet these staggering
numbers have not stopped the Gates Foundation from
spending
millions annually to push the DTP vaccine onto African
healthcare systems.
There is perhaps no
more famous element of the Gates Foundation’s work than
its polio eradication
effort.
Yet once again, the polio drugs the Western world uses
and the drugs given to the Global South are dramatically
different.
The Foundation has
spent over $1 billion
distributing
an oral polio vaccine (OPV) that contains a live polio
virus to African and Asian countries. This live virus
can replicate inside a child’s intestine and spread in
places with poor sanitation and plumbing. That means
people can contract the virus from the vaccine.
According to a 2017
study
by University of California San Francisco and Tel Aviv
University, the polio virus used in the OPV has done
just that in at least two dozen cases the researchers
examined – it rapidly regained its strength and started
spreading on its own.
In recent years, more
children
have been paralyzed by the vaccine strain of the virus
in OPV than by wild polio.
In an interview with NPR,
Professor of Microbiology Raul Andino said, “It’s
actually an interesting conundrum. The very tool you are
using for polio eradication is causing the problem.”
Back in 2000, the U.S.
halted its use of the OPV. But in the developing world,
the Gates Foundation
uses
its instruments of influence to ensure governments
continue administering it.
Polio outbreaks in
both the
Philippines
and the
Congo are the result of
the OPV. In
2005, Oxford’s Clinical Infectious Diseases Periodical
contended
that polio outbreaks in China, Egypt, Haiti and
Madagascar were also caused by the OPV, declaring that
“the time is coming when the only cause of polio is
likely to be the vaccine used to prevent it.”
A few years later, the
same periodical, while
arguing
that developing countries should shift to the Inactive
Polio Vaccine (IPV) the U.S. uses, wrote that the OPV is
not only giving kids polio, but also “seems to be
ineffective in stopping polio transmission” to begin
with.
As the British Medical
Journal reported in 2012, “the most recent mass polio
vaccination programs [in India], fueled by the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation, resulted in increased cases
[of polio].”
According to doctors
in India, the OPV is also causing outbreaks of another
disease called non-polio acute flaccid paralysis
(NPAFP). After an epidemic of NPAFP paralyzed
490,000 children
between 2000 and 2017, the doctors published a
report
suggesting that “the increase in NPAFP and the later
decrease in such cases was indeed an adverse effect of
the [WHO’s] polio immunization program.”
NPAFP is “clinically
indistinguishable from polio but
twice
as deadly.” Keith Van Haren, Child Neurologist at the
Stanford School of Medicine
explains
that, “it actually looks just like polio, but that term
really freaks out the public-health people.”
In 2012, the British
Medical Journal wryly
noted
that polio eradication in India “has been achieved by
renaming the disease.”
That same year, the
Indian Journal of Medical Ethics observed both
vaccine-derived polio outbreaks and the massive increase
in NPAFP. It likened eradication efforts in India to the
occupation of Iraq,
stating:
“When the U.S. was
badly mired in Iraq in 2005, Joe Galloway suggested that
the U.S. must simply declare victory, and then exit.
Perhaps the time is right for such an honourable
strategy with regard to polio eradication.”
However, the Gates
Foundation and the WHO have stayed the course,
distributing the OPV in countries including Nigeria,
Pakistan, and Afghanistan, where the Foundation says the
WHO is now providing “unprecedented levels of technical
assistance” for polio vaccination campaigns.
In Syria, the
Gates-backed GAVI pledged $25 million for polio
immunization in 2016. A year later, the WHO
reported
that 58 children in Syria had been paralyzed by the
vaccine-derived form of
the virus.
Despite the scientific
consensus against the OPV, and the opposition to such
programs in the target countries, OPV remains
administered in Africa, the Middle East and South Asia
as part of “aid” programs, creating windfall profits for
pharmaceutical giants who may not have been able to sell
their products elsewhere.
With drugs discarded by the West, an
illusion of choice for African women
The Foundation’s
practice of pushing dangerous drugs onto health systems
of the global south is not limited to vaccines. It also
helps distribute long acting, reversible contraceptives
(LARCs).
Melinda Gates
often
refers
to LARCs as a way to empower women of impoverished
countries and give them more control over their lives.
However, some of these LARCs have had adverse effects,
and the distribution of the products without informed
consent offers women little self determination.
One example is
Norplant, a contraceptive implant manufactured by
Schering (now Bayer) that can prevent pregnancy for up
to five years. It was yanked from the U.S. market in
2002 after more than 50,000 women filed lawsuits against
the company and the doctors who prescribed it. 70 of
those class action
suits
related to side effects like depression, extreme nausea,
scalp-hair loss, ovarian cysts, migraines, and excessive
bleeding.
(A human development
website called
Degrees, which
was
bankrolled
by the Gates Foundation,
alleges
that Norplant “never gained much traction globally”
because inserting it and removing it “proved
cumbersome.”)
Slightly modified and
rebranded as Jadelle, the dangerous drug was promoted in
Africa by the Gates Foundation
in conjunction
with USAID and EngenderHealth. Formerly named The
Sterilization League for Human Betterment,
EngenderHealth’s original mission, inspired by the
racist pseudoscience of eugenics, was to “improve
the biological stock of the human race.” Jadelle is not
approved by the FDA for use in the U.S.
Then there’s Pfizer’s
Depo-Provera, an injectable contraceptive used in
several African and Asian countries. The Gates
Foundation and
USAID
have collaborated again to fund this drug’s distribution
and introduce it into the healthcare systems of
countries including Uganda, Burkina Faso, Nigeria,
Niger, Senegal, Bangladesh, and India.
In 2012, Melinda Gates
promised to supply contraceptives like Depo-Provera,
which cost between $120 – $300 a year, to at least 120
million women by 2020. In 2017, Melinda Gates authored
an article on
Medium
reporting that she and her partners were on track to
keeping that promise, and pledging $375 million in
additional funds to do so. That meant that
Pfizer
made between $15 and $36 billion through this program.
Disturbingly, Depo
Provera’s active ingredient – depot medroxyprogesterone
acetate (DMPA) – has been associated with side effects
like life threatening
blood clots
in the lungs,
blindness,
and
breast cancer.
Pfizer’s one-time use
version of the drug, called Sayana Press, is intended to
be administered by “community health workers.” In
Senegal, however, almost
half
of these workers had no
more than a sixth grade education.
Senegal’s Health
Ministry was forced to change its laws so the health
workers could legally distribute the drug;
according
to The Population Research Institute, USAID funded NGOs
“strong armed the government” into this decision.
Additionally, training
materials
for Sayana Press did not provide information on all the
side effects of DMPA, violating principles of informed
consent. According to WHO guidelines, DMPA shouldn’t be
used by women with rheumatic disorders. But USAID funded
patient screening
checklists
for Uganda did not instruct health workers to ask women
about a history of such disorders.
Guidelines
for trainers of providers of Sayana Press also don’t
mention that the drug has been
strongly associated
with bone density loss and an
increased
risk of bone fractures. As The Population Research
Institute
put it,
“The FDA requires that U.S. women be informed of this
fact, but African women are kept in the dark.”
In 2015, seventy
Indian feminist groups and scholars signed a
statement
protesting the regulatory approval of Depo-Provera,
citing side effects like excessive bone density loss,
weight gain, excessive bleeding, and depression. Their
statement argued that womens’ organizations have
consistently opposed the introduction of dangerous
contraceptives like these, and that “there are risks
that the women are not given enough information to make
an informed choice of contraceptive method.”
Despite widespread
domestic opposition and the mounting evidence of
negative side effects, the Foundation continues working
with USAID to distribute drugs like Depo-Provera.
Guinea pigs in the Global South
Gates’ channels of
influence have also been instrumental in testing drugs
on people in poor countries.
Before a drug can be
sold to the public, the FDA and similar agencies in
Europe mandate that a company test the drug on human
subjects. The third and final phase of these tests
before the drug can go to market are
Phase III
clinical trials, during which companies are required to
give the drug to large numbers of people in controlled
studies.
It’s
estimated
that about 90 percent of drug development costs are
incurred in Phase III trials. But these companies can
avoid costs by conducting the trials in so-called
developing nations.
This cost-cutting
strategy has been
outlined
by the U.S. consulting firm McKinsey, which suggested
including “emerging markets” in drug trials to reduce
“the loss of significant revenues.”
So it comes as no
surprise that the Gates Foundation, a McKinsey client,
outwardly stated its “goal” was to help drug companies
side-step safety trials and accelerate the drug approval
process for pharmaceutical companies. Or, as they
put it,
to “refine potential interventions such as vaccine
candidates before they enter costly and time consuming
late-stage clinical trials.”
While conducting
clinical trials on the poor is financially advantageous,
it can also be dangerous. Citing numerous examples of
the danger, a South African newspaper once
declared,
“We are the guinea pigs for the drug makers.”
From 2009 to 2011
Phase III clinical trials of the first malaria vaccine –
funded
by the Gates Foundation and manufactured by GSK – took
place in seven African countries (Ghana, Kenya, Malawi,
Mozambique, Burkina Faso, Gabon, and Tanzania).
In 2011, GSK’s own
data showed female children were
dying
(from any cause) at more than twice the rate of those in
the control group. Children who received the vaccine
also had a risk of meningitis that was
10 times
higher than those who didn’t. Yet the WHO still
coordinates the
administration of
the drug to over
seven hundred thousand children in
Ghana,
Kenya,
and
Malawi
– as part of an unofficial clinical trial it calls a “pilot
implementation.”
(It was the Gates-aligned SAGE that
recommended
the pilot implementation.)
Since
this
product is administered to children as part of the
countries’ vaccination schedule, the WHO claims consent
is implied. But parents aren’t always given information
regarding safety risks, again rendering them unable to
give informed consent for their children. As the
Associate Editor of the British Medical Journal
put it,
“an implied consent process means that recipients of the
malaria vaccine are not being informed that they are in
a study.”
The Gates Foundation
also
funded
clinical trials of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines
made by GSK and Merck. These drugs were given to 23,000
young girls in remote Indian provinces as part of an
initiative by the Gates-backed
Program for Appropriate Health and Technology (PATH).
Again, study
participants were robbed of the ability to give informed
consent,
as
the “pros and cons of vaccination [were not] properly
communicated to the parents/guardians.”
According to Professor
Linsey McGoey from the University of Essex:
“Most of the
vaccines were given to girls at ashram pathshalas
(boarding schools for tribal children), side-stepping
the need to seek parental consent for the shots.”
PATH also failed to
implement a
system
for recording major adverse reactions to the vaccines,
which is legally mandated for large-scale clinical
trials. The Indian Committee on Health and Family
Welfare brought PATH to court for this alleged
transgression, accusing it of human rights violations
and of
child abuse.
In 2013, the court’s two judge panel
observed
that while foreign companies “are treating India as a
heaven for clinical trials, and it is proving hell for
India.”
India’s parliamentary
committee charged
that
the “sole aim” of the Gates-funded project was to
promote “commercial interests of the HPV vaccine
manufacturers, who would have reaped windfall profits if
PATH had been successful in getting the HPV vaccine
included in the universal immunization program of the
Country.”
Editor Emeritus of the
National Medical Journal of India
concurred
with the panel’s report, writing that this was an
“obvious case where Indians were being used as guinea
pigs.”
Weakening the public health systems
of states
In addition to pushing
dangerous products onto poorer countries, the Foundation
actually stunts improvements to public health systems
and access to health care. Thus, changes in social and
economic determinants of health take a backseat to more
profitable, technology centric solutions like vaccines.
This phenomenon is
reflected in the WHO budget. As stated, the Foundation
is the largest contributor to the WHO’s polio
eradication program, but the largest funder of WHO’s
“health systems” program is the government of Japan.
According to Global
Justice Now, “the [Foundation’s] heavy focus on
developing new vaccines… detracts from other, more vital
health priorities such as building resilient health
systems.”
As Dr. David Legge
explains, “[Gates] has got a mechanistic view of global
health, in terms of looking for silver bullets. All of
the things he supports are largely framed as silver
bullets … That means that major issues that have been
identified in the World Health Assembly are not being
addressed, including in particular the social
determinants of health, and the development of health
systems.”
In 2011, Gates spoke
at the WHO, saying: “All 193 member states, you must
make vaccines a central focus of your health systems.”
University of Toronto public health
professor Anne Emanuelle Birn
wrote in 2005 that the Foundation had a “narrowly
conceived understanding of health as the product of
technical interventions divorced from economic, social,
and political contexts.”
“The Gates Foundation has long championed
private sector involvement in, and private sector
profit-making from global health,” Birn told The
Grayzone.
One of GAVI’s senior representatives even
reported that Bill Gates often told him in private
conversations “that he is vehemently ‘against’ health
systems” because it is a “complete waste of money.”
This phenomenon is
also reflected in how the policy agenda is set at GAVI.
GAVI, too, focuses on vertical health interventions like
vaccines, instead of horizontal approaches, like
building and strengthening health systems in poor
countries.
A
report
by Global Public Health outlines the “Gates approach” to
health systems, analyzing how disease-specific projects
like vaccines have eclipsed efforts to work on publicly
funded health systems. The article’s author, Katerini
Storeng, pointed to GAVI as an example of how “global
health initiatives have come to capture the global
health debate about health systems strengthening in
favor of their disease specific approach and ethos.”
According to a former
GAVI staffer who spoke with Storeng, even former GAVI
CEO Julian Lob-Levitt was aware of the “absurdity
of vaccine campaigns that consume four weeks to plan,
implement and clean up and that, when repeated eight
times a year, totally paralyze the health system.”
At one point,
Lob-Levitt commissioned a series of evaluations of GAVI,
which identified weaknesses in health systems and the
need to strengthen them. The push to do so, however, was
“strongly resisted by many powerful actors [on GAVI’s
board]” including USAID and the Gates Foundation,
according to Storeng’s interviews.
Storeng writes that a
GAVI staffer told her that the Foundation was a “very
loud, vocal voice, saying that we do not believe in the
strengthening of health systems.”
The report also
notes:
Gates’ reputation
for being ‘not very good at listening’ has encouraged a
non-confrontational approach within the global health
arena … a former GAVI employee and HSS [health systems
strengthening] proponent recounted how he and his
colleagues used to ‘roll down the HSS posters’ when Bill
Gates came to visit the GAVI headquarters in Geneva
because he is known to ‘hate this part’ of GAVI’s work.
The Foundation’s
preference for weak public health systems, and for
techno-centric solutions to public health problems is
not limited to its work with the drug industry. It also
shapes policy in the crucial sector of food.
Early this year, Gates
set up a
new
non-profit institute based in St. Louis, Missouri, home
of Monsanto. The Foundation said the new organization,
dubbed Gates Ag One, will “enable the advancement of
resilient, yield enhancing seeds” and introduce them
into “crops essential to smallholder farmers,
particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.”
Yet while helping
small farmers sounds like a noble endeavor, the
Foundation has worked to ensure that the Global South is
dependent on Western industry, whether through drugs or
high-tech seeds and agrochemicals.
Much of this activity
began in 2006 when the Gates Foundation partnered with
the Rockefeller Foundation to give birth to the Alliance
for A Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA). Gates committed
$100 million, while the Rockefeller Foundation ponied up
with $50 million.
The approach of AGRA,
which opened up African markets to U.S. agribusiness, is
based on the belief that hunger is due to a lack of
Western tech, instead of the result of inequality or
exploitation.
According to a
report
by the African Center for Biosafety:
“It is striking
that none of those in the forefront of the revolution is
African. No different from the colonial project in
Africa, this new revolution is created and most ardently
advocated by white men claiming to fight for the
emancipation of Africans from the clutches of hunger and
poverty.”
Through AGRA, the
Foundation pushes for the introduction of patented,
genetically modified (GM) seeds and fertilizers. While
these technologies help seed and chemical giants like
Monsanto, they often undermine food security.
Dr. Vandana Shiva
maintains that the idea that GM crops increase yields is
a “scientific falsehood.” For another, the Foundation
again ensures that valuable resources are diverted away
from systemic solutions to hunger and poverty.
As the Ecologist
asserted,
Gates and Monsanto partner in the “inappropriate and
fraudulent GMO project which promotes a technical quick
fix ahead of tackling the structural issues that create
hunger, poverty and food insecurity.”
What’s more, the Gates
Foundation actually influences African governments to
change laws to accommodate the agriculture industry
According to
Grain.org:
“In Ghana … AGRA
helped the government review its seed policies with the
goal of identifying barriers to the private sector
getting more involved. With technical and financial
support from AGRA, the country’s seed legislation was
revised and a new pro-business seed law was passed in
mid-2010. Among other things it established a register
of varieties that can be marketed. In Tanzania,
discussions between AGRA and government representatives
facilitated a major policy change to privatise seed
production. In Malawi, AGRA supported the government in
revising its maize pricing and trade policies.”
Commenting on the role
of Gates in reshaping agriculture markets, Shiva told
The Grayzone, “You create a new field, you invest in it.
You force governments to invest in it, you destroy the
regulation. You destroy the alternatives, you attack the
scientists. And you create a whole machinery for your
monopoly.”
As in the case of
Gates and Big Pharma, these moves can be explained by
the Gates Foundation’s apparent conflicts of interest.
And as before, the examples go on and on.
Former Deputy Director
of the Foundation’s agriculture program,
Robert Horsch,
was previously a high ranking executive at Monsanto,
where he worked for 25 years. Horsch
led
the team that manages agricultural grants, and
according
to Global Policy Forum, “he was asked to join the Gates
Foundation particularly for the purpose of continuing
his Monsanto research.”
Sam Dryden, the former
director of the Gates Foundation’s agriculture program,
previously led two of the largest genetically modified
seed companies, Emergent Genetics and Agragentics
Corporation. In 2005, Emergent was bought by Monsanto,
where Dryen stayed for six months. While he was at the
Gates Foundation, The Guardian called him “the most
powerful figure in the global south’s agriculture.”
The former
program officer for Gates’ agriculture program, Don
Doering, was
previously
a founding member of Monsanto’s Biotechnology Advisory
Council. Doering
led
an Agricultural Development team that directed money
into “help[ing] poor farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa and
Asia.”
Then there’s Florence
Wambugu, who authored the book “Modifying Africa” and
has been
called
“an
apostle of Monsanto in Africa.”
After receiving a scholarship from USAID, Wambugu became
a researcher at Monsanto. She was then appointed to the
Gates Foundation’s Global Development board.
As with several of its
pharmaceutical endeavors, the Gates Foundation works
with USAID in the agriculture sector. Pamela K.
Anderson, the current director of agriculture
development at the Gates Foundation, is currently on the
board of USAID.
22 thousand children
die
each day due to poverty. Yet socio-economic causes of
health problems can be neglected when industry aligned
interests call the shots. Such is the case with the
Gates Foundation’s primacy in the global health arena.
In short, the
Foundation’s leadership in previous global health
efforts displays an allegiance not to public health, but
to the imperatives of Western capital. It prefers not to
strengthen health systems, but to ensure nations remain
dependent on Big Pharma and/or Big Agriculture for as
long as possible. It is in this light the Gates’
leadership in the global fight against COVID-19 can be
understood.
Operation Warp Speed immunizes Big
Pharma from lawsuits
In mid May,
the Trump Administration
unveiled its new
COVID vaccine project:
“Operation Warp Speed.”
While
announcing the new
project, President Trump
boasted that his
administration “cut
through every piece of
red tape to achieve the
fastest-ever, by far,
launch of a vaccine
trial.”
Like the
Trump Administration,
Bill Gates is advocating
for the acceleration of
COVID drug approval
timeline. He writes that
“governments will need
to expedite their usual
drug approval processes
in order to deliver the
vaccine to over 7
billion people quickly.”
He
says “there is
simply no alternative”
to this agenda.
In March, the U.S.
passed
federal regulations granting liability immunity to
corporations producing COVID 19 drugs, including
vaccines. It also provided liability immunity to any
entity distributing the drugs.
With over one hundred
COVID vaccines
currently
in development, this means products will be indemnified
against lawsuits, even if they produce harmful effects.
If vaccine makers are
indeed exempted by governments around the globe from
legal penalties, these companies have little incentive
to protect people from harmful side effects. As in the
past, it seems that citizens of the world’s poorest
countries are set to become “guinea pigs for the drug
makers.”
Bill Gates’ advocacy
for legal immunity for drug manufacturers dates back to
at least
2015,
when he lamented during the Ebola outbreak that there
was no clear process for “providing indemnity against
legal liability.” He suggested that during a “global
epidemic,” drug companies should be indemnified to
“avert long delays.” Now, his proposal is coming to
fruition.
Gates justified his
position on the grounds that companies will need to
produce drugs as fast as possible to save lives, and
these new drugs may not always be safe. “Understanding
safety… is very, very hard,” he said to
CBS.
“There will be some risk and indemnification needed
before [getting a vaccine out] can be decided on.”
Normally, a drug goes
through a phase of animal testing before it gets tested
on small (Phase I), medium (Phase II) and large numbers
of people (Phase III). But with COVID, Gates
wants
to “save time” by conducting tests on humans and animals
at the same time.
Today, the US is “compressing
what is typically ten years of vaccine development,”
according to the head of the U.S. National Institute of
Health (NIH).
This may produce some
troubling effects. For one, a successful coronavirus
vaccine has yet to be produced, and a new one could
trigger lethal reactions. Tropical disease specialist
Dr. Peter
Hotez,
who worked on a failed vaccine for another coronavirus
(SARS), said that during experimental tests of the drug,
animals fell victim to what he calls “immune
enhancement.” The animals that were given the shot
developed more severe (and often fatal) versions of the
virus when compared with unvaccinated animals.
Hotez
told
Reuters, “The way you reduce that risk [for humans] is
first you show it does not occur in laboratory animals.”
The medical expert stated that while “[he understands]
the importance of accelerating timelines for vaccines in
general, but … this is not the vaccine to be doing it
with.”
Without
performing the initial phase of animal testing normally
required to bring a vaccine to market, a biotech company
named Moderna is
now
conducting human trials for its COVID vaccine. Moderna’s
vaccine is an mRNA type which has never been approved by
the FDA for use on humans.
This technology, which
contains genetically engineered cells that can
permanently alter human DNA, was developed with grants
from both the Gates Foundation and the Pentagon’s
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
Moderna
says
it has a “strategic alliance” with DARPA, which
gave
the company $25 million in total.
Moderna’s mRNA
technology has been
singled out
by Bill Gates as “one of the most promising options for
COVID.” Gates even has a “global health project
framework
agreement”
with Moderna to give it up to $100 million for the
development of its mRNA technology, in exchange for
receiving “certain non-exclusive licenses.”
Moderna’s co-founder
Robert Langer has partnered with Gates in the past on
projects such as the contraceptive
microchip
implant
that can be activated wirelessly.
When Moderna
announced
the completion of its Phase 1 safety trial May 18,
corporate
news
outlets parroted Moderna’s “good
news.” But the
fine print
in the release revealed that three of the 15
participants injected with the highest dose of the
vaccine developed grade three systemic symptoms, which
the
FDA
defines as “severe,” “disabling,” requiring
“hospitalization,” but “not immediately
life-threatening.”
On May 15, President
Trump appointed
Moncef Slaoui
– a
board
member of Moderna who until May 19
held
more than $10.3 million in Moderna stock – as Chief
Scientist of the nation’s effort to find a COVID 19
vaccine.
Slaoui, who calls
himself a “venture
capitalist,”
is also on the board of
directors
at The International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI), a
“public-private” partnership organization that’s
received more than $359 million from the Gates
Foundation.
Sloaui also held
leadership positions at GSK. While heading the company’s
Research and Development, GSK pleaded guilty and paid $3
billion in
what the U.S. Justice Department referred to as the
“largest healthcare fraud settlement in U.S. history.”
The fraud included the coverup of the link between the
drug Paxil and suicidal and depressive side effects
(predominantly in children), the coverup of the link
between the drug Avandia and heart attacks, which the
FDA
estimated
lead to 83,000 excess heart attacks, as well several
bribery and illegal kickback schemes.
While he was GSK’s
Chairman of Vaccines, Slaoui oversaw the development of
the swine flu vaccine named Pandemrix, which was rushed
to market without proper testing during the swine flu
outbreak. The result was an unsafe shot that left at
least eight
hundred
people with brain damage, 80 percent of them children.
Since GSK only
agreed
to give governments the vaccine on the condition that it
be indemnified from liability, U.K. taxpayer money was
used to pay
millions of
pounds in compensation to the victims.
Slauoi was hired to be
the Trump Administration’s “vaccine czar” as a private
contractor, not a government employee. This means, as
Public Citizen
explained,
that Slaoui can “maintain an extensive web of
conflicting financial interests without the need to
divest of, recuse from, or disclose those conflicting
interests.”
The corporate media
likes to paint the COVID response as a tug of war
between the blowhards like Donald Trump and “champions
of science” like Bill Gates. However, Slaoui’s
appointment to co-direct “Operation
Warp Speed”
indicates that here, the Trump Administration and the
Gates Foundation are on the same team.
After entering his new
Trump Administration role, Slaoui
declared
that Moderna’s clinical trial data made him confident
“we will be able to deliver a few hundred million doses
of vaccine by the end of 2020.”
Although the U.S.
government has
picked
Moderna as one of its five COVID vaccine “finalists,”
financial moves by some company executives suggest
Moderna’s best days might be behind them.
According to SEC
filings,
the company’s Chief Financial Officer Lorence Kim sold
214,000 Moderna shares on the day of the press release,
immediately profiting more than $16 million.
Thomas Lys, a
professor of accounting at Northwestern University, was
quoted
by Stat News saying this could simply be a financial
decision by Moderna to get some liquidity, but that
“there’s always that other possibility – that these guys
really know the whole thing is bogus and they’re selling
while the selling is good.”
Chief medical officer
Tal Zaks, who held close to 100,000 shares of Moderna
stock at the beginning of the year, started dumping
shares a few days before Moderna announced its vaccine
was ready for human testing, has profited more than $18
million in 2020, and now owns zero shares.
“If he even thought
there was a chance this vaccine would be good, he’d hold
on to a few hundred shares,” said Del Bigtree,
host
of the medical talk show The Highwire. “I think we may
have a whistleblower right here, that is saying to the
world, yes, I have zero. I am the Chief Medical Officer
and I’m telling you, this ship is sinking.”
A centralized stockpile to
“make WHO dependent on the goodwill of Big Pharma”
In October 2019, the
Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security hosted
something called
Event 201
in partnership with the World Economic Forum and the
Gates Foundation.
(A former steering
committee member of The Johns Hopkins Center for Health
Security is
now
the Trump Administration’s stockpile chief and that the
CEO
of Johns Hopkins Medicine is also on the Board of
Directors at
Merck.)
Event 201 was an
exercise simulating the outbreak of a novel coronavirus.
It included representatives from the U.S. National
Security Council, as well as corporate leadership from
drugmakers like Johnson & Johnson. While similarities
between the mock outbreak and the real outbreak have
prompted unsubstantiated theories about Bill Gates “predicting”
COVID 19, it is undeniable that the policy proposals
that emerged out of the exercise are being implemented
today.
Following the
simulation (complete
with
chillingly realistic mock press conferences and
newscasts by an imitation network called GNN), the three
organizations issued
recommendations
for dealing with a “severe pandemic.” One recommendation
was to have a “robust international stockpile” of
medical countermeasures like vaccines.
During the simulation,
the Foundation’s Global Health President,
Chris Elias,
urged such a stockpile. He
explained
that “a global stockpile would certainly help ensure a
rational and strategic allocation,” but that a
collaboration between the WHO and the private sector is
necessary to make one effective.
From an objective
standpoint, a centralized stockpile of medical
countermeasures can be of value during a health crisis.
But the question of who controls and distributes it
raises troubling issues.
Dr. David Legge told
The Grayzone that Elias’s suggestion would further
increase the influence of Big Pharma, because
“undoubtedly, a public private partnership with a
procurement focus and distribution focus would involve
Big Pharma and make WHO dependent on the goodwill of Big
Pharma.”
Gates might argue that
the control and distribution of such stockpiles should
also be influenced by Western institutions like NATO. In
2015,
he wrote that during a “severe epidemic,” “some global
institution could be empowered and funded to coordinate
the [epidemic response] system,” that there should be
discussion about splitting authority between the WHO and
“others (including the World Bank and the G7
countries),” and that “the conversation should include
military alliances such as NATO.”
Gates has also
argued
that “low-income countries should be some of the first
to receive [the COVID 19 vaccine].” If NATO is playing a
role in controlling and distributing vaccines, such aid
could be used to further a Western military agenda, as
Western “aid” has been during past humanitarian
interventions.
Gates has nearly
monopolized the realm of public health policy, both
nationally and internationally. “Fauci and I are in
constant contact,” he has proclaimed, referring to the
face of the U.S. COVID response, National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci.
At the same time, the mega-billionaire is apparently
talking
to both CEOs of pharmaceutical companies and heads of
government “every day.”
While maintaining
relationships with government organizations and the
profit-driven private sector, the Gates Foundation has
become perhaps the most influential player in the global
COVID 19 response. So if the Foundation’s work has
favored Western multinationals at the expense of public
health in the past, why should anyone expect a different
result this time?
History repeats itself
Early July the
Associated Press
reported that South Africans had gathered in
Johannesburg to protest the presence of the phase III
AstraZeneca clinical trial in Africa. The Gates
Foundation had
poured
$750
million into this vaccine effort in the last month, and
protestors were photographed holding banners that read,
“we not guinea pigs” and, “no to Gates poison.”
Demonstration
organizer Phapano Phasha told AP that vulnerable groups
were being manipulated into participating in the trial
without being able to make an informed choice. “I
believe in science,” Phasha said. “I’m not against
vaccinations, I’m against profiteering.”
Reports
say
both Moderna’s and AstraZeneca’s vaccine could be
available for public distribution by the end of the
year.
The Grayzone contacted
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Global Alliance
for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI), and the Program
for Appropriate Technologies in Health (PATH) for
comment on this article and has yet to receive a
response.
Jeremy Loffredo
is a journalist based in Washington D.C. He has worked
on various independent documentaries in New York and
helped produce several international news programs. He
is currently putting together a documentary on the Green
New Deal which you can support at https://www.gofundme.com/f/the-green-new-deal-explained-for-real
Michele Greenstein is a journalist based in Washington
D.C. A former correspondent for RT America, she produced
a series on the technology war between the U.S. and
China and a documentary from the field on 2019’s
anti-government movement in Hong Kong. -
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