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11.12.2018 Feature Article

Secrets Of The Ebola River And The Exposure Of Belgium Inventors

Peter Piot in Congo - They call him the disease detective, actually he is a disease planterPeter Piot in Congo - They call him the disease detective, actually he is a disease planter
11.12.2018 LISTEN

The so-called Belgium discoverer of the Ebola virus, Peter Piot, in Congo, in 1976, after the explosion of the disease in the inhabitants near River Ebola, knew the Crimean virus exactly and similar to Ebola existed since 1943. There is no scientist who can lack that knowledge.

Peter Piot, together with his friend professor Guido van der Groen and Joe McCormick from the American Centers for Disease Control CDC (who had a biowarfare agenda) investigated the so-called mysterious double hemorrhagic fever epidemic in Zaïre and Sudan in 1976.

Together with Karl Johnson, another famous virus-hunter who completed the group, they discussed the name of a virus causing the hemorrhagic virus epidemic explosion.

Because Karl Johnson often gives names of rivers to a discovered virus they discussed the majestic Kongo River, the nearest river in the outbreak area, but because of fear people might think the virus was spread by this enormous river they excluded this name. So they took the map of Zaïre and looked to the nearest river from the spot of the epidemic and this happens to be Ebola River or Black River in Lingala. But in no way, there is any connection between hemorrhagic fever and Ebola River. In fact, Ebola River wasn't even the closest river from their mission in Yambuku. Still, they decided for the name Ebolavirus because they become tired of finding the right name.

Why is it that scientists want to give names to viruses? That question is very easy to answer because that enables to call themselves the discoverer of the virus which hopefully provides them with fame, money and the Nobel-prize.

But in fact, Marburgvirus, Crimeanvirus, Congo Crimeanvirus, and Ebolavirus are completely identical only genetic engineered. Stolen names for a virus from whom all mentioned scientists knew it was invented in biowarfare laboratories.

Professor Guido van der Groen
Besides researching the Ebolavirus, Guido van de Groen has contributed a great deal on the research of the Aids virus. For his work regarding the Aids virus, Van der Groen received an Award from the Social Youth Action, an organization dedicated to fighting against HIV/AIDS in Belgium and developing countries.

The now-retired professor has an impressive number of 269 published articles and made a great contribution to virology. The question is why Belgian minister De Croo didn’t speak of Van der Groen during an Ebola conference?

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. Was it because Van der Groen has said earlier that Ebola was a man-made disease in a USA laboratory for Bio-warfare purposes? Or does De Croo knew Ebola was an invention for biowarfare and depopulation purposes?

https://secretsofaidsandebola.blogspot.com/search/max-results=8?q=Groen

THE HISTORICAL ROLE OF BELGIUM IN AFRICA’S EBOLA EPIDEMIC

Ebola Pandemic Rises At The Horizon
The Democratic Republic Congo DRC knows that a further pandemic Ebola outbreak is a distinct possibility and, whilst hoping for the best, they planned for the worst. We need to learn from the DRC’s experience in order to be prepared for the horror of an act of a pandemic biological warfare. After all, it is also a distinct possibility and arguably just a matter of time having Ebola in a war zone and rebels who will not hesitate to use Ebola.

How prepared are our governments, let alone our airports, to manage a bio attack? A chemical weapons attack would be bad enough, but the SARS crisis demonstrated the longevity of the impact of an infected society and the need to rapidly implement measures to contain a disease. Yet how many airports have developed contingency plans against an Ebola attack, let alone tested them, as a result?

In 2014 the World Health Organization (WHO) was widely criticized for failing to anticipate that an outbreak of Ebola in a remote forested region of south-eastern Guinea would trigger a public health emergency of international concern (pheic).

In explaining the WHO’s failure, critics have pointed to structural restraints on the United Nations organization and a leadership ‘vacuum’ in Geneva, among other factors. And now at this very moment fear become reality because the latest Ebola outbreak is within a remote area and moreover in a war zone.

One of the most damning verdicts came from Dame Barbara Stocking, the chair of the WHO’s Ebola Interim Assessment Panel. Expressing bafflement as to why ‘early warnings during the West African Ebola outbreak did not result in an effective and adequate response’, Stocking concluded that what had been lacking was ‘independent and courageous decision-making by the Director-General Chan and the WHO Secretariat’.

Stocking recommended that to avoid such mistakes in future the WHO should consider an intermediate level of alert to draw the attention of the global health community to events falling between routine public health risks and those that might require the declaration of a pheic.

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Belgium scientists Peter Piot and Guido Van Der Groen in Congo in the early seventies- What were they doing in Congo before Ebola occurred in 1976?

Harvard’s Global Health Institute and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LHSTM) was similarly critical of senior officials in Geneva. However, rather than laying the failures at the door of a single individual, the panel concluded that the slow response reflected a lack of clarity about a range of governance issues across the WHO, as well as the roles and responsibilities of member countries, and proposed ‘ten essential reforms’ to the organization. Meanwhile, other groups identified ‘gaping holes in preparedness’.

WHO officials informed Oliver Johnson in Freetown in March 2014, ‘Ebola doesn’t cause urban outbreaks’. But, of course, Ebola had never been observed as far west as Guinea before.

Nor had previous outbreaks occurred close to the borders of three countries or in a region where protracted civil wars had left weakened and fragmented health systems and a legacy of distrust between rural populations and urban political elites.

Nor had previous outbreaks visited border regions with such mobile populations or where new road and transport systems had greatly reduced travel times between villages and cities.

Situation Report December 10, 2018
Ebola epidemic is observed far east
Ebola is observed close to borders of three countries and more

Ebola is observed in a civil warzone
Ebola is observed between rural populations and urban political elites

With such mobile populations or where new road and transport systems

Ebola is starting to cause urban outbreaks
Everybody knew in Western Africa Ebola is spreading faster and more widely than anticipated, the WHO and other agencies appeared to become paralyzed by fear, further delaying the deployment of responders to West Africa.

This paralysis is best understood as a result of the misleading early media reports from Guinea and Liberia, reports that played on the popular image of Ebola as a highly infectious hot virus with the ability to cause severe hemorrhaging and other terrifying clinical symptoms.

But communities in the affected countries did not buy into this image of Ebola; instead, their fears were driven by rumors and scientific information about the ‘real’ motivations of foreign medical teams and distrust of ETUs.

Social resistance further aggravated by bans on traditional burials and the failure to adopt community engagement methods that had proved so effective in winning the trust of rural populations during Ebola outbreaks in other parts of Africa, evidence of yet another aspect of the neglect of knowledge of Ebola as a bio-warfare agent.

And this is exactly why the United States of America has retracted their CDC employees out of fear they will be killed by rebel forces. Africans have lost their trust in foreign powers forever... Indeed the Ebola pandemic rises at the horizon...

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