
During the speech of Belgium Deputy Prime Minister, Alexander De Croo, at the conference of; “Ebola: from Emergency to Recovery”, on March 3, 2015, he overlooked the audience. Amongst them was Her Majesty Queen Mathilde, and as usual, he started with:
“Majesty, your interest to the broader field of development cooperation and humanitarian aid is commonly known. Right from the beginning of the current Ebola crisis you devoted your high attention to it and provided us all with your support. Your presence here today is yet again exemplary of your personal attention to this crisis.”
Was De Croo trying to hide something or because there were many celebrities, including the queen at the conference? Because De Croo failed to mention the role of Hillary Koprowski and Belgium nurses and doctors who deliberately sprayed contaminated vaccine into the mouths of the poor and innocent Congolese, which later gave birth to Ebola and other deadly diseases.
The one who really should attend this conference wasn’t there, so, De Croo has to state “I would also like to apologize, Prime Minister Charles Michel for not being able to make it today. As you probably know, in a previous life the Prime Minister has served as Minister for Development Cooperation and has a special interest in the fight against Ebola. He has requested me to speak on his behalf.”
That was a pity because Michel should have known the date of scientific literature of the criminal pharmaceutical, medical and corrupt (African) politicians, who also knew Aids and Ebola were man-made diseases, just as the Western World, Russia and Japan, and two top Belgium scientists, Guido van der Groen and Peter Piot knew of the medical crimes.
Other attendants at the conference who did listen to the hollow words of De Croo were the Presidents of Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea as well as the President of Congo-Brazzaville, the Prime Minister of Togo and High Representative Mogherini, European Union, for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. To the participants of the conference, De Croo tried to explain how good Belgium is for the African course, but these celebrities should have known better.
Belgium Deputy Prime Minister, Alexander De Croo’s speech.
“Your Majesty, Ladies, and Gentlemen. It is now almost 40 years ago since the so-called Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) was discovered. We speak of 1976 and it was a young and devoted Belgian doctor, Peter Piot, who identified the virus in the village of Yambuku, in today’s Democratic Republic of Congo.
Four decades have passed since then and the Ebola virus has struck communities on various occasions, each time in a harsh and cruel way. These epidemics somehow always ended after a few months of time and did not seem to result in a truly systemic crisis. Or at least, this is how the international community had perceived it up until last year.
2014 became the year of the global wake-up call. Most probably it was a two-year-old boy in the town of Guéckédou, in Guinea, who was the first victim of the current Ebola epidemic. He already died in 2013, on December 6th to be more precisely. Things went very fast then and it was the organization Médecins Sans Frontières who first sounded the alarm. Being active in the field and on Ebola for many years, they had never seen an outbreak of the virus with such dimensions.
In August last year, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared it a “Public Health Emergency of International Concern”. By mid-February 2015, 9.365 deaths were counted and 23.218 cases were registered in West-Africa. By the turn of the year, the efforts of the so many courageous local and international health workers seemed to result in success. But we again start to receive alarming figures; in the week up to February 22nd, the WHO reported 99 new confirmed cases.”
But during the African Ebola crisis, the only thing Belgium really did was to let the Council of Ministers approved the deployment of a mobile laboratory in Guinea to fight the spread of the Ebola epidemic. The government of France received the expected guarantees for the safety of the Belgian team.
The ministers Didier Reynders, Alexander De Croo, Steven Vandeput, and Jan Jambon have to B-FAST given permission to facilitate the deployment of the mobile laboratory. B-FAST has expertise in the field of coordination of development assistance (B-FAST is the rapid intervention structure of the Belgian government. It provides emergency aid during disasters abroad, at the request of the foreign government).
Belgium History About The So-Called First Ebola Outbreak in 1976.
Once in 1976, a research team had been formed, including a special Belgian Aids researcher, to meet at the Antwerp Prince Leopold Institute of Tropical Medicine. To their surprise, they didn’t find only members of the American National Institute of Health but also many others, including the director of the American National Institute of Allergy and Infection Diseases NIAID, and surprisingly the director Peter Piot of the Prince Leopold Institute itself.
The highly experienced doctors at the American Center For Disease Control had enrolled an unfamiliar epidemiologist from Johns Hopkins Hospital, who told them exactly how the investigation in Zaire should be given. The plan is to hide the result of the investigation from the public as a medical crime. The outcome of the research remained a mystery because the results are never published.

Queen Mathilde of Belgium at the Ebola conference: Poverty was an opportunity for the West and America to inflict the disease in Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone
Moreover, it is quite surprising that since it is known that the Belgian Congo, now Zaire, in this period was plagued by the ‘skinny or slim disease,’ synonymous with Aids, and that the disease was associated with fatal infections found in black American and African men. Equally remarkable is that several Belgian researchers published on Aids and opportunistic infections in Zaire after the American researcher Robert Gallo had made it official that the Aids disease was caused by the new virus HTLV.
Even though blood samples of the deceased Zairians were stored in the Belgian research laboratories of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Plant since from the seventies, obviously, no one was interested to find out what killed them, because they know. Maybe the Prince Leopold Institute of Tropical Medicine was afraid to make the issues of Jonas Salk, Alfred Bruce Sabin, and Hillary Koprowski open before the declaration of Robert Gallo.



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