by Patrick Howley
September 06, 2020
from
NationalFile
Website
Spanish equivalent version
Italian
version
Birds of a feather flock together...
The World Bank's
COVID-19 Strategic Preparedness and Response
Program documents, marked "For Official Use Only," identify the
Bank's COVID-19 program as ending in March 2025, more than four
years away from our current date (read page 1 of 60).
The program's
start date was April 2020.
The World Bank website has
an active record for,
"COVID-19 Diagnostic
Test Instruments and apparatus (902780) exports by country in 2018",
...even though the World Health Organization
(WHO) did not name Coronavirus
"COVID-19" until February 2020 amid this year's outbreak.
There is
also a record for COVID-19 tests exported in 2017.
At this time, we
await a clear explanation from officials as to why this record
exists, and will update accordingly.
Full list with all countries - WITS
The mainstream media publication Newsweek is now reporting that Dr.
Anthony Fauci's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID)
funded Wuhan Institute of Virology coronavirus
research.
Newsweek's headline
proclaims:
"DR. FAUCI BACKED
CONTROVERSIAL WUHAN LAB WITH MILLIONS OF U.S. DOLLARS FOR RISKY
CORONAVIRUS RESEARCH."
Journalist Patrick Howley
first reported that NIAID funded Wuhan Institute of Virology
scientists to conduct bat coronavirus research in an article for
National File.
Howley
reported:
Dr. Anthony Fauci's
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID) actually funded a study on Bat Coronavirus, which
was a project that included scientists at the Wuhan Institute of
Virology, the Chinese lab at the center of controversy over their
bat research.
That study confirmed in 2018 that humans have died
from coronavirus.
Here's an excerpt from the April 4, 2018 NIAID website entry
entitled "New Coronavirus Emerges From Bats in China, Devastates
Young Swine":
"A newly identified coronavirus that killed nearly
25,000 piglets in 2016-17 in China emerged from horseshoe bats near
the origin of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV),
which emerged in 2002 in the same bat species.
The new virus is
named swine acute diarrhea syndrome coronavirus (SADS-CoV). It does
not appear to infect people, unlike SARS-CoV which infected more
than 8,000 people and killed 774.
No SARS-CoV cases have been
identified since 2004.
The study investigators identified SADS-CoV
on four pig farms in China's Guangdong Province.
The work was a
collaboration among scientists from,
...and other organizations,
and was funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID), part of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The research (Fatal
Swine Acute Diarrhoea Syndrome caused by an HKU2-related
Coronavirus of Bat Origin) is
published in the journal Nature.
The researchers say the finding is
an important reminder that identifying new viruses in animals and
quickly determining their potential to infect people is a key way to
reduce global health threats."
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