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A Message from Robert F. Kennedy Jr. - Chairman on Leave
March 05, 2023

Alleged measles injection causing serious adverse effects in children – South Africa

Article by Shabnam Palesa Mohamed

 

The mass rollout of alleged measles injections in South Africa is leading to worried complaints about adverse effects, some serious, that children are now suffering. CHD Africa learned via project SA VAERS, through parents, doctors, and concerned community members, that children receiving the measles shot are experiencing swollen faces, headaches, fever, confusion, inter alia. We have also been sent videos and photographs of children who could not wake up from a sleep they fell into, a number of whom were rushed to hospital in fear and agony.

Here are some of the cases reported via SA VAERS to CHD Africa

  • Durban: A five year old child was given the alleged measles shot. Below are investigative and support conversations that clearly show the child is suffering, there was no informed consent, and the school is receiving multiple complaints about adverse effects.

 

  • Durban: A concerned social worker shared with me that children in a poor community are given the ‘measles’ shots and are falling ill:

 

  • Cape Town: A mother has to rush her child to hospital after she experienced adverse effects from being given an alleged measles injection, without the parent’s consent. We have a voicenote of a conversation the mother has with a nurse after the child took ill. In the conversation, the mother confirms that the child was injected without consent. SA VAERS was informed that when the child was taken for the hospital check up, that there were other families with their children, all of whom were given the measles shot and who were ill.

Child with fever, malaise, eczema etc                                      Child’s thumb marked with voter style ink

 

This is a photo of the one page Department of Health form given to children for their parents/guardians to sign. It does not cover informed consent. The concept of consent in a medical context can be described as the moral, ethical and legal expression of the human right to respect for autonomy and self-determination (I Kennedy. Treat Me Right, Essays in Medical Law and Ethics (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1988) 389).

 

 

Measles injections adverse effects

Acknowledged common side effects

  • pain, redness and swelling at the injection site
  • fever after 7-10 days
  • moderate or a high fever in children up to 39 degrees Celsius or above
  • generalised faint rash (non infectious) five to 12 days later
  • head cold and/or a runny nose
  • a cough
  • puffy eyes
  • swollen glands.

Other serious side effects may include

  • seizure due to high fever
  • bruising or bleeding (thrombocytopenia)
  • inflammation of the brain (encephalitis)
  • a severe allergic (anaphylactic) reaction to the vaccine

 


What type of injections could these be?

In 2021, a study was published on a coronavirus injection that was based on the measles and mumps injections. Questions are now being raised in the public whether the children are receiving traditional measles shots, mRNA based measles shots, or C-19 shots.

According to the National Institute for Health:

  • Scientists developed a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine by adding a key coronavirus gene to the measles vaccine.
  • The experimental vaccine protected against COVID-19 in animal studies, supporting further development.
  • This vaccine candidate could potentially be used against both COVID-19 and measles.

“Based on these combined findings in rodent experiments, Ohio State University scientists envision one day incorporating a coronavirus antigen into the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine as a way to produce COVID-19 immunity in kids. We were pushing to make a vaccine for infants and children with the idea that if we could incorporate the mumps COVID vaccine into the MMR vaccine, you’d have protection against four pathogens – measles, mumps, rubella and SARS-CoV-2 – in a single immunization program.” Jianrong Li, senior author of the study and professor of virology in Ohio State’s Department of Veterinary Biosciences and Infectious Diseases Institute.”

How did they do this? “To develop a mumps-based COVID-19 vaccine, the researchers took the genome of the mumps virus and inserted a gene that would allow it to make a protein spike that is found on the surface of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. This protein spike is used by the immune system like a flag. When immune cells in the body recognize this flag, they tell the immune system to attack the invading virus. By attaching the protein spike to the mumps virus, the body can learn to recognize what an actual SARS-CoV-2 virus looks like and build immunity to it, like a training exercise for the immune system.”

The article states that “The study was funded in part by NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), and National Cancer Institute (NCI). Results appeared on March 23, 2021, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.”

Can the measles injection shed, causing the virus to be spead to others?

A Viruses Journal 2019 article states: Available evidence suggests MeVV RNA can be identified up to 14 days after vaccination, with detection beyond this rare. We report detection and confirmation of MeVV RNA from the respiratory tract of 11 children between 100 and 800 days after most recent receipt of measles-containing vaccine. These novel findings emphasize the importance of genotyping all MeV detections and highlight the need for further work to assess whether persistent MeVV RNA represents viable virus and if transmission to close contacts can occur.” This study was conducted in Australia, which the WHO declared had eliminated measles in 2014.

Who makes the MeasBio® injections?

Biovac manufactures the new measles vaccine MeasBio®. Public and private providers in South Africa use the MeasBio® (Biovac) vaccine. In the private health sector, there are additional vaccines (Priorix® and Omzyta®) South African government owns 47.5% of Biovac shares. According to an informed source “Biovac supplies over 25 million doses of vaccines annually to the South African EPI. Cost of measles vaccine (is) R226,40. Biovac is the only vaccine manufacturer in sub-Saharan Africa and it currently sources the vaccines it supplies to the Department of Health from appropriately registered pharmaceutical companies in South Africa. Nearly half of Unicef vaccines are funded by the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (Gavi), with about two-thirds of Gavi-eligible countries being African.”I tried to research the GAVI – South Africa relationship on the GAVI website, but, visible from the screengrab below, the link to the page is not working:

 

Why are six months old babies given the measles injection?

It is not clear why the South African health department recommends and administers measles shots starting from babies six (6) months up. According to a Lancet journal article, “Vaccinating infants with a first dose of measles-containing vaccine (MCV1) before 9 months of age in high-risk settings has the potential to reduce measles-related morbidity and mortality. However, there is concern that early vaccination might blunt the immune response to subsequent measles vaccine doses.” This, according to doctors I engaged, could lead to more measles ‘outbreaks’ or cause a more severe illness, which would then drive the need for the supplied of more profitable injections.

My research into the African pharmaceutical market shows: The WHO wants to grow African vaccine production from 1% to 60% by 2040. Africa is seen as a market where highly profitable growth in pharmaceuticals is still achievable. Africa’s pharmaceutical industry grew to USD 28.56 billion in 2017, from USD 5.5 billion just a decade earlier. The African market may be worth USD 56 billion to USD 70 billion by 2030. A 2021 forecast on Africa believes that “It is opportunistic for multinationals and pharmaceutical companies seeking new sources of growth as developed markets stagnate, while patients will gain access to medicines previously unavailable on the continent.”

 

Court Case: Stop The C19 Shots on 5 – 11 year old children

Connected to this measles injection story is the #StopTheShots case, whose proponents launched a second application to stop the C-19 shots on 5-11 year old children – as these injections are risky, ineffective, unnecessary and costly to the South African national fiscus. This second case was not heard by the court. There are witnesses who can attest to the judge reacting with anger, as the first Stop The Shots case for an interdict against all shots, pending full investigation into safety and compensation, is yet to be heard in the Pretoria High Court. Meanwhile, ethical doctors speaking up about the risks of the C-19 shot are being targeted by the HPCSA (Health Professions Council South Africa).

CALL TO ACTION – South Africa

  • If you as a child, or your child/ward experienced negative effects after the ‘measles’ shot, please report via: [email protected]
  • South African citizens and residents can also report all negative effects of the C-19 shot via SA VAERS 

RESOURCES

  • Mary Holland and Polly Tommy discuss a pattern of global measles hysteria on a informative episode of Good Morning CHD
  • The Measles Book: Thirty-Five Secrets the Government and Media Aren’t Telling You about Measles and the Measles Vaccine
  • Measles Science with Dr Andy Wakefield. How dangerous is it? Do measles injections make people vulnerable? What about immunity
  • New Study Supports Conclusion of Retracted 2020 Thomas Study Showing Unvaxxed Kids Healthier Than Vaxxed (Weiler & Blaylock)

Follow CHD Africa for updates

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