The Chinese Communist authorities plan to vaccinate 50 million Chinese against the Chinese Communist virus before the Chinese New Year holiday. However, the vaccines developed in China are not only expensive, but none of them have passed the final qualification verification. Experts are concerned that the authorities’ focus on collecting money to vaccinate people on a large scale will increase safety risks and could lead to serious consequences.
Chinese vaccine people dare not play
On December 17, the South China Morning Post reported that inactivated vaccines manufactured by Sinopharm and Beijing Kexing Holdings Biotechnology Co.
Authorities require the vaccine to be administered before the Chinese New Year holiday, with the first phase of 50 million doses to be administered by Jan. 15 next year and the second phase to be completed by Feb. 5.
The authorities stipulate that preventive vaccines are not covered by health insurance and must be administered at one’s own expense. The vaccine is expensive and charges vary from place to place. Ms. Chen, a community volunteer in Wuhan, told Free Asia that the local vaccination fee is 2,700 yuan for one shot, and three shots are required, totaling more than 8,000 yuan.
Ms. Chen said that many residents in Wuhan want to be vaccinated but don’t have enough money, and are expecting the price of the vaccine to drop. But there are also many people who are worried about the safety of the vaccine and are reluctant to receive it.
Ms. Chen revealed that some insiders told her not to get the shot and to wait a little longer. “They still don’t have a long time for clinical trials, so they (doctors) told me not to fight first.”
The Financial Times published an article on December 16, saying that none of the CCP virus vaccines developed in China now have gone through the development process, and some vaccines have not even released data from the first phase of animal experiments before entering the human clinical trial stage, questioning the fear of problems with the follow-up of Chinese vaccines.
Guo Li, a parent of a child victim of tainted milk powder in Beijing, said the public’s fears about the quality of vaccines are well-founded and that “the risks are very high.”
Mr. Zhao, a Guangzhou resident, said there are community members offering free vaccines against the Chinese Communist virus, but he is afraid to get them.
Xie Lijuan, an executive at a British-owned company in Shanghai, revealed that the vaccine is now being administered within China, by officials, and also within medical institutions.
Xie Lijuan said, “I heard from my sister, who is in a medical institution, she said the hospital let them sign up for the vaccine, but no one in the hospital dared to sign up, they didn’t want to do it. Because the first batch of vaccines don’t know how safe it is.”
Previously, Shanghai officials mapped hospital staff and the percentage of health care workers who refused vaccination was as high as 93.4 percent.
Chinese vaccines explode in serious accidents
In fact, the Chinese vaccine has already been the subject of serious accidents in clinical trials. Brazil’s National Health Surveillance Agency (Anvisa) said on Nov. 9 that it had suspended clinical trials of the Beijing Kexing vaccine because of “serious adverse reactions” in vaccine subjects on Oct. 29.
According to Brazilian radio station CBN (Central Brasileira de Notícias), the accident resulted in the death of the volunteer, whose cause of death was unknown. However, Beijing KeXing denied that the “serious adverse reactions” in the subjects were related to the vaccine.
On November 1, thousands of Brazilians gathered in the main shopping street of São Paulo to protest, holding signs that read “We are not white mice” and “No vaccines.
Chinese workers infected with virus from vaccine
Although the Chinese vaccine has not been validated, a month ago, the Jiaxing CDC in Zhejiang Province announced that more than one million people in Zhejiang had been vaccinated against the Communist virus, which is still in the process of development.
In addition, according to official Communist Party sources, people who have left the country since June, especially workers posted outside the country by central government-affiliated enterprises, have been vaccinated. However, a large number of vaccinated people have already been infected, sparking international fears about the Chinese vaccine.
Cited by Radio Free Asia on December 15, the source said that four days ago, at least 17 Chinese were reported to have been infected in Angola, 16 of whom were employees of a Chinese-owned state-owned enterprise in Lunda Norte province. They had all been vaccinated against the Chinese Communist virus developed by the Sinopharm Group before leaving the country.
The report also quoted sources from Serbia as saying that about 300 of the 400 employees of a Tianjin Electric Power Construction Company project in Pančevo, China, have been diagnosed with Chinese Communist pneumonia. Among them were a large number of employees from China, who had also been vaccinated against the CCP virus by Sinopharm.
On December 5, the Chinese Embassy in Uganda announced that 47 Chinese workers had been infected with the CCP virus in Uganda. They should also have received the Chinese vaccine.
Chinese Vaccine Fears Outbreak of Virus
Former Harvard School of Public Health professor Dunhou Li has pointed out that the inactivated vaccines produced in China are very challenging to produce and it is difficult to ensure that there are no safety hazards.
Lee said outright that he would definitely not give the vaccine produced in China.
Taiwan‘s epidemic prevention experts also made it clear recently that Taiwan will not develop inactivated vaccines and will not be vaccinated with inactivated vaccines.
Earlier this year, the Chinese Communist Party concealed the epidemic, which led to the global spread of the virus and the scourge of the world. Now, the United States, Britain and other countries have developed vaccines for the Chinese Communist Party’s virus. In order to seize the vaccine market, the Chinese Communist Party has given the Chinese people vaccines that have not yet been successfully developed and have safety risks, and even exported them to other countries. Public opinion condemns this move by the Chinese Communist Party as a second spread of the virus, threatening to trigger another global outbreak of the disease.
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