EXPLOITATION OF A CHILD THAT
ADVANCED THE AFRICAN AIDS AGENDA
By David Icke

I was sickened to watch a BBC television documentary last Sunday about Nkosi Johnson, a wonderful young boy who became the face of the campaign in South Africa to make the lethal drug AZT more widely available.

See elsewhere on this website and in Christine Maggiore's book, What If Everything You Thought You Knew About Aids Was Wrong? for the background to AZT, the "wonder drug" that destroys the immune system and causes the very Aids it is supposed to help prevent. AZT was formerly a chemotherapy drug that was withdrawn because it was too toxic!! Imagine, therefore, how toxic it must be given the effect on people of the chemotherapy drugs still in widespread use. And what do chemotherapy drugs do? They kill cells. That's it.

They don't kill just cancer cells, but all cells, including those which form the human immune system. The chemotherapy equation is simple: will they kill the cancer cells before they kill enough healthy cells to kill the patient.

The mother of Nkosi died of Aids and he was diagnosed HIV-positive at birth. In his short life he was used as a publicity stunt by his adopted mother, Gail Johnson, to highlight her version of the Aids problem in Africa. He was worked till he virtually dropped and complained of being exhausted by the rounds of interviews and speeches (written and rehearsed by his adoptive mother.)

The finale of the programme was his speech, again carefully rehearsed by Gail Johnson, to a major Aids conference in South Africa attended by President Thabo Mbeki. The programme, which as always was unquestioning in its support for the official version of Aids, presented Mbeki in a highly negative light for quite rightly challenging in his conference speech the "evidence" that HIV causes Aids. He was also criticised for leaving the arena during the speech of Nkosi calling for AZT to be available free to Africans with HIV. Maybe he walked out because he knew that this lovely little boy was being used to produce highly emotional support for the HIV causes Aids and AZT is an answer campaign led, ultimately, by the Illuminati pharmaceutical cartel.

Interestingly, the drug cartel has since "given in" to the campaign to make "anti-Aids drugs" available far more cheaply in South Africa, but all they were doing was playing a mind game. You work people up into a frenzy demanding lethal drugs, which they are manipulated to believe are the only answer. Then you make them believe they have won their campaign against you to make them widely available, when, in truth, you want them consumed in vast quantities.

All debate over the true nature and cause of Aids, and therefore the most effective treatment, is lost in the frenzy to demand and take the "wonder drugs" which will kill you by giving you Aids. It is a drug induced genocide and that is what Africans face unless they wake up to the way they are being manipulated. Former president, Nelson Mandela, has supported the AZT for Africans campaign because it would appear he is simply accepting that the official version of "science" could not be wrong and the multi-national drug cartel would not tell us lies.

It is against this backdrop that Mbeki has been marginised on this issue and any voice of reason is condemned as uncaring. It is in this environment, also, that Credo Mutwa must operate and shout in the wilderness.

Here is a typical news story which shows how any challenge to the official line is jumped on from a great height, even if you are the president.

Read the Guardian report here

Related Resource Materials:


What if Everything You Thought You
Knew About AIDS Was Wrong?

by Christine Maggiore






World Without AIDS

by Steven Ransom

and Phillip Day



Link URL for websites
http://www.davidicke.com/icke/articles3/exploited.html










Mbeki attacked for HIV/Aids doubts 

                                                  Chris McGreal in Johannesburg
                                                  Tuesday September 19, 2000
                                                  The Guardian 

                                                  The South African government's most powerful ally - the
                                                  country's trade union confederation Cosatu - has accused
                                                  President Thabo Mbeki of causing confusion and costing lives
                                                  by questioning the link between HIV and Aids. 

                                                  Mr Mbeki was forced to listen impassively yesterday while trade
                                                  unionists at the annual meeting of the Congress of South African
                                                  Trade Unions loudly applauded their leader, Willie Madisha, as
                                                  he condemned the president on an issue that is causing as
                                                  much friction between the unions and government as economic
                                                  policy.

                                                  "The current public debate on the causal link between HIV and
                                                  Aids is confusing," said Willie Madisha. "For Cosatu, the link
                                                  between HIV and Aids is irrefutable and any other approach is
                                                  unscientific and unfortunately likely to confuse people. As a
                                                  result, it can undermine the message that all South Africans
                                                  must take precautions to avoid infection."

                                                  When Mr Mbeki spoke immediately afterwards, he made only a
                                                  fleeting reference to Aids as a cause of people being unable to
                                                  work.

                                                  The unions' criticism comes on the heels of a confidential
                                                  memorandum written by the ANC's own health committee and
                                                  addressed to Mr Mbeki and his health minister, saying HIV
                                                  causes Aids and that they must publicly acknowledge this. The
                                                  committee said "we do not have the luxury of fiddling whilst the
                                                  masses are dying".

                                                  Mounting anger and dissent within the ruling party, the unions,
                                                  the medical profession and among large numbers of ordinary
                                                  black people over Mr Mbeki's questioning of conventional
                                                  scientific thought has forced the government on to the defensive.

                                                  It has moved to quell criticism with a series of adverts
                                                  "clarifying" the president's views. They say that Mr Mbeki has
                                                  never denied a link between HIV and Aids but that he does not
                                                  attribute immune deficiency exclusively to the virus, that poverty
                                                  is also a primary factor, and that drugs are not the only
                                                  response.

                                                  The president's critics accuse him of playing with words and
                                                  undermining years of Aids education. His government has used
                                                  these "doubts" to justify withholding drugs from HIV positive
                                                  people, including pregnant women, they say, adding that
                                                  scientists have long recognised that ill-nourished poor people
                                                  with weak immune systems may succumb to HIV more swiftly
                                                  but that has little to do with the cause of Aids.

                                                  South Africa has the fastest growing rate of Aids infection in the
                                                  world with about one in 10 of the population is HIV positive.
                                                  Trade union leaders are particularly disturbed because of the
                                                  excessively high rate of infection among their members. They
                                                  accuse the government of playing with lives.

                                                  Mr Madisha yesterday launched a direct attack on Mr Mbeki's
                                                  unwillingness to provide drugs to Aids patients. "Government's
                                                  unwillingness to provide anti-retrovirals, particularly to prevent
                                                  mother-to-child transmission, is unfortunate. Concerns around
                                                  cost are understandable but often exaggerated. In any case,
                                                  they cannot be used to deny treatment for the millions of
                                                  victims. This is tantamount to condemning HIV/Aids victims to
                                                  early deaths," he said.

                                                  "We need to put the current controversies behind us and develop
                                                  strategies to obtain cheap drugs, either through hard
                                                  negotiations with producers or through parallel importation of
                                                  gener ics and compulsory licensing."

                                                  Last week, a South African newspaper polled all 27 members of
                                                  Mr Mbeki's government on whether they believe HIV causes
                                                  Aids. Only one, the labour minister, said he did.

                                                  "Yes, of course HIV causes Aids," said Membathisi Mdladlana.

                                                  The science minister sidestepped the question by saying that
                                                  the fact that the government is funding a research vaccine
                                                  indicated it assumed there was a link.

                                                  Most of the remaining ministers failed to answer the question
                                                  directly or to respond at all, which may reflect just how many
                                                  doubts there are within Mr Mbeki's cabinet over his policy. His
                                                  ministers may not have had the courage to dissent but neither
                                                  were they publicly going to back his controversial position.

                                                  Only the office of the health minister, Manto
                                                  Tshabalala-Msimang, toed the president's line with any
                                                  enthusiasm.

                                                  "The minister is working on the assumption that there is
                                                  acquired immune deficiency. There is a variety of things that
                                                  causes the collapse of the immune deficiency and it cannot be
                                                  attributed solely and exclusively to the virus," it said.