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Kenyan Catholics Say They Have Evidence Of World Health Organization’s Population Control Scheme

Chuck Ross Investigative Reporter
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The Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops claims that vials of a tetanus vaccine being used in a program administered by the World Health Organization and UNICEF contain a chemical hormone that causes miscarriages and other infertility issues.

“We raised questions on whether the tetanus vaccine was linked to a population control program that has been reported in some countries, where a similar vaccine was laced with Beta-HCG hormone which causes infertility and multiple miscarriages in women,” reads a statement signed by 27 bishops.

“We want to announce here, that all the tests showed that the vaccine used in Kenya in March and October 2014 was indeed laced with the Beta-HCG hormone,” the bishops wrote in their statement, which was accompanied by a press conference on Thursday.

The bishops have demanded answers from Kenyan health officials over what they believe a secret program using the pregnancy hormone HCG, or Human Chorionic Gonadotropin.

According to Matercare International, another faith-based health organization that does work in Kenya, women are being injected with both HCG and tetanus anitbodies.

“When tetanus is laced with HCG and administered in five doses every 6 months, the woman develops antibodies against both the tetanus and the HCG in 2 — 3 years after the last injection,” wrote Wahome Ngare, an obstetrician affiliated with Matercare.

“Once a mother develops antibodies against HCG, she rejects any pregnancy as soon as it starts growing in her womb thus causing repeated abortions and subsequent sterility.”

The complaint has divided medical professionals and clergy in Kenya, Kenya’s Daily Nation reports.

Critics of the vaccination program being administered by WHO point to the organization’s role in developing HCG in the 1990s. In a report issued in 1992, WHO discussed a series of “fertility regulating vaccines” it was developing.

“Research on a vaccine against the hormone, human chorionic gonadotropic (hCG) for use by women, is most advanced,” reads the WHO report.

The Kenyan bishops claim that WHO’s vaccination program is suspicious. They claim it is being administered to women of childbearing age and not on young girls and men.

Supporters of the vaccination program point out that tetanus still kills tens of thousands of people worldwide each year. The vaccination is especially needed in Kenya because of the high number of at-home births, which can raise the risk of tetanus infection. Health officials have said that the tetanus vaccine is perfectly safe and denied that it is being used to lower the birth rate.

The bishops say they met in March and October of this year with Kenya’s cabinet secretary for health and another health official, both of whom agreed to administer tests of the vaccine.

“However the ministry did not cooperate and the joint tests were not done,” the bishops wrote in their letter.

They said the results were mailed to Kenyan health officials.

The World Health Organization did not respond to The Daily Caller’s request for comment.

(h/t Patheos)

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