“Infertility: A Diabolical Agenda,” is
the fourth vaccine-related documentary by Dr. Andrew Wakefield. It tells
the story of an intentional infertility vaccine program conducted on
African women, without their knowledge or consent.
While it’s been brushed off as a loony conspiracy theory for years,
there’s compelling evidence showing it did, in fact, happen, and there’s
nothing to prevent it from happening again.
The Backstory
As explained in the film, the World Health Organization began working
on an anti-fertility vaccine, led by Dr. G.P. Talwar in New Delhi,
India, in the 1970s, “in response to perceived overpopulation.” For 20
years, the WHO’s Task Force on Vaccines for Fertility Regulation worked
with population control in mind.
In 1993, the WHO finally announced a birth-control vaccine had successfully been created to help with “family planning.”1
The paper trail reveals that by 1976, WHO researchers had successfully
conjugated, meaning combined or attached, human chorionic gonadotropin
(hCG) onto tetanus toxoid, used in the tetanus vaccine. As a result,
when given to a woman, she develops antibodies against both tetanus and
hCG.
HCG is a hormone produced by cells surrounding the growing embryo.
These hormone-producing cells protect and support embryonic growth and
eventually form the placenta.
As explained in the film, hCG is the first signal that tells the
woman’s body she’s pregnant. In response to this signal, her ovaries
then produce a second hormone, progesterone, which maintains the
pregnancy to term.
By combining hCG with tetanus toxoid, it causes this crucial
pregnancy hormone to be attacked and destroyed by your immune system, as
it’s now misperceived as an invading pathogen. Since hCG is destroyed,
progesterone is never produced and, hence, the pregnancy cannot be
maintained.
So, if you’re already pregnant when
taking this witches’ brew, it will likely result in a spontaneous
abortion, and if you’re not already pregnant, you won’t be able to get
pregnant, as this crucial pregnancy hormone is under constant attack by
your immune system. Repeated doses prolong these effects, effectively
rendering you sterile.
The WHO Has Been in the Depopulation Business for Decades
As detailed in a Scientific Research paper published in 2017,2 “WHO publications show a long-range purpose to reduce population growth in unstable ‘less developed countries.’”
In other words, the WHO’s longstanding policy has been to support
depopulation in third world countries, and they’ve studied depopulation
strategies in India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nigeria, Mexico, Indonesia,
Brazil, The Philippines, Thailand, Egypt, Turkey, Ethiopia and Colombia
for decades.3
While creating an anti-fertility vaccine for those who really don’t
want children is one thing, using deception to lure girls and young
women into taking it is another entirely. As it turns out, the WHO is
not above using deception and trickery to shut down fertility in
populations they deem unworthy of reproduction.
The Great Deception
The central figures of the film are two Kenyan gynecologists, Drs.
Wahome Ngare, and the late Stephen K. Karanja. Both state in the film
that infertility is now the biggest gynecological problem in Africa. In
recent years, there’s been a significant increase in women losing their
pregnancies and couples who cannot conceive.
“I have seen the tears. They lose their identity. You die inside,”
Antoninah Mutinda says. She knows, because she’s one of the African
women whose fertility has been mysteriously impacted. After her third
miscarriage, she was tested and found to have extremely high anti-hCG
antibodies. She now suspects the tetanus vaccine she was given may be
the culprit.
The anti-fertility vaccine was rolled out in the mid-‘90s, but
despite support from the Kenyan leadership and “elite groups,” it was
not popular among Kenyan women, who were concerned about the potential
for abuse. They worried it might be disguised as a regular tetanus
vaccine program.
Their concerns were valid because, as it turns out, this had already
happened. In 1995, the Catholic Women’s League of the Philippines won a
court order halting a UNICEF tetanus program that was using tetanus
vaccine laced with hCG. Three million women between the ages of 12 and
45 had by that time already been vaccinated. Anti-hCG-laced vaccines had
also been found in at least four other countries.
Undeterred by bad press, that same year, 1995, the Kenyan government
launched a WHO tetanus campaign under the guise of eradicating neonatal
tetanus. There were telltale signs that something was wrong, however,
because it was already standard practice to vaccinate pregnant women
against tetanus. Now, the WHO insisted women who weren’t pregnant needed
the shot as well, in case they were to become pregnant.
Karanja learned of the deceptive anti-fertility campaigns in other
countries during a medical conference in 1995, and became immediately
suspicious of the tetanus campaign in his own country. Karanja convinced
leaders of the Catholic church — one of the largest health care
providers in Kenya — to test the tetanus vaccine being given, to make
sure there was no foul play.
Without explanation, the WHO suddenly abandoned the campaign. Alas,
19 years later, in 2013, they were back. All girls and women, 15 to 49
years of age, were instructed to get vaccinated with a series of five
injections, six months apart. This, it turns out, is the exact schedule
required for the anti-fertility vaccine to produce sterility. Regular
tetanus prevention requires only one injection every five to 10 years,
and under no circumstance would you need five of them.
Vaccines Test Positive for Anti-hCG
The Catholic Church decided to test the vaccines, and collected three
sample vials directly from clinics during the 2014 campaign. The
samples were then sent to three independent laboratories for testing. As
feared, they found hCG in them. Another six vials were then collected,
and tested by six independent labs. This time, half were found to
contain hCG.
At this point, the Catholic Church went public, urging girls and
women to not comply with the vaccination campaign. In an effort to
settle the dispute, an investigative committee was formed, consisting of
three representatives selected by the Catholic bishops, and three
government officials.
It was agreed that the nine vials already collected would be
retested, along with 52 samples from a distributor who sells tetanus
vaccine to the Kenyan government. This time, a more precise type of
test, high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), was chosen.
Dr. Nicholas Muraguri, director of medical services for the Kenyan
government, contracted agriQ Quest to perform this testing. However, he
urged them to test samples provided directly by him rather than the
vials previously agreed upon. AgriQ Quest decided to analyze both
batches.
The vials that tested positive for hCG using enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay (ELISA), still tested positive using HPLC, but none
of the samples provided by Muraguri tested positive.
A Decades’ Long Cover-Up
Shockingly, the government then demanded agriQ Quest “alter their
report to indicate that they were safe to be administered.” When agriQ
Quest refused, the government, the WHO and UNICEF responded by launching
a public attack, accusing the Catholic Church of “peddling
misinformation.”
And, since the only samples found to contain hCG were those provided
by the Church, the government accused them of tampering with the vials
in an effort to undermine confidence in the vaccine.
An added twist here is that the vials that tested positive had the
same batch numbers as vials that tested negative. Only later did agriQ
Quest discover that these negative vials had fake labels on them. They
were not, in fact, from the same lots as those that tested positive.
They weren’t even made by the same manufacturer.
AgriQ Quest also claims they can prove the positive samples were not
tampered with, because they did not test positive for hCG in general.
The test clearly shows the hCG was conjugated with tetanus toxoid, and
this cannot occur by simply adding hCG to a vial of tetanus vaccine.
The conjugation — the chemical linking or bonding — of hCG to the
tetanus toxoid can only occur during the manufacturing process. This is
the smoking gun that proves the neonatal tetanus vaccine campaign was a
cover for a population control campaign.
Muraguri also lied when he claimed the Kenyan government had only one
supplier of tetanus vaccine. As it turns out, there were two.
Biological E. Limited provided a regular tetanus vaccine, while the
hCG-positive batches came from Serum Institute of India — the same
country where most of the WHO’s anti-fertility research had been
conducted.
Both Ngare and Karanja paid a steep price for their vigilance. The
medical board called them for disciplinary action. Karanja was issued a
gag order, and since 2014 was not allowed to speak publicly about
vaccines in Kenya. He broke that gag order for this film. April 29,
2021, Karanja died, allegedly from COVID infection.
A Truly Diabolical Agenda
Speaking for millions of women just like her, Mutinda, who has now struggled with infertility for years, says:
“To imagine there’s a system somewhere, that some
people somewhere are behind my inability to carry pregnancy to term,
that is a diabolical agenda!”
Before his untimely death, Karanja shared a message with the world, through the makers of this film:
“When they are through with Africa, they’re coming for you.”