“…The clinical studies are being conducted at the Mano River Union Lassa Fever Network in Sierra Leone. Tulane, under contract with the World Health Organization, implements the program in the Mano River Union countries (Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea) to develop national and regional prevention and control strategies for Lassa fever and other important regional diseases.
“Clinical testing on the new recombinant technology demonstrates that our collaboration is working,” says Douglass Simpson, president of Corgenix. “We have combined the skills of different parties, resulting in development of some remarkable test kits in a surprisingly short period of time. As a group we intend to expand this program to address other important infectious agents with both clinical health issues and threat of bioterrorism such as ebola.”
The third document is found on the Sierra Leone Ministry of Health and Sanitation Facebook page (no login required), dated July 23 at 1:35pm. It lays out emergency measures to be taken. We find this curious statement: “Tulane University to stop Ebola testing during the current Ebola outbreak.”
Why? Are the tests issuing false results? Are they frightening the population? Have Tulane researchers done something to endanger public health?
In addition to an investigation of these matters, another probe needs to be launched into all vaccine campaigns in the Ebola Zone. For example. HPV vaccine programs have been ongoing. Vials of vaccine must be tested to discover ALL ingredients. Additionally, it’s well known that giving vaccines to people whose immune systems are already severely compromised is dangerous and deadly.
Thanks to birdflu666.wordpress.com for discovering hidden elements of the Ebola story.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/what-a...e-researchers-doing-in-the-ebola-zone/5394582
The Troubling Truth Behind the Ebola Outbreak
By Tony Cartalucci
Global Research, April 13, 2014
New Eastern Outlook
In the Guardian’s article, “Panic as deadly Ebola virus spreads across West Africa,” it reports:
Since the outbreak of the deadly strain of Zaire Ebola in Guinea in February, around 90 people have died as the disease has travelled to neighbouring Sierra Leone, Liberia and Mali. The outbreak has sent shock waves through communities who know little of the disease or how it is transmitted. The cases in Mali have added to fears that it is spreading through West Africa.
The Guardian also reported that Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), also known in English as Doctors Without Borders, had established treatment centers in Guinea, one of which came under attack as locals accused the foreign aid group of bringing the disease into the country. Also under fire is the government of Guinea itself, which has proved incapable of handling the crisis.
This latest outbreak, which has yet to be contained and is being considered by Doctors Without Borders as an “unprecedented epidemic,” illustrates several troubling truths about global health care, emergency response to outbreaks, and the perception many have of a West subjecting the developing world to a “medical tyranny.”
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-troubling-truth-behind-the-ebola-outbreak/5377653
[video=youtube;kPGMPlEHLTA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kPGMPlEHLTA[/video]
CNN’s FAREED ZAKARIA GPS features an interview with George Soros, chairman of Soros Fund Management and author of The Tragedy of the European Union (2014). Soros spoke with Fareed about Putin’s actions and intentions in Ukraine, anti-Semitism, and the sense of nationalism on the rise in Ukraine and in Europe.
TRANSCRIPT:
FAREED ZAKARIA, HOST: George Soros has made one of the world's great fortunes betting on global trends. And he is deeply troubled by events and political trends in Ukraine specifically...but Europe more broadly.
He's just back from the region. And he joins me to talk about what he saw, what he thinks, and where he's putting his money.
FAREED ZAKARIA, HOST: George Soros, pleasure to have you on.
GEORGE SOROS, SOROS FUND MANAGEMENT: Same here.
ZAKARIA: First on Ukraine. One of the things that many people recognized about you was that you, during the revolutions of 1989, funded a lot of dissident activities, civil society groups in Eastern Europe and Poland, the Czech Republic. Are you doing similar things in Ukraine?
SOROS: Well, I set up a foundation in Ukraine before Ukraine became independent of Russia. And the foundation has been functioning ever since. And it played a - an important part in events now.
http://cnnpressroom.blogs.cnn.com/2014/05/25/soros-on-russian-ethnic-nationalism/
Sierra Leone: the final frontier?
By Carolyn Cohn NOVEMBER 16, 2009
Sierra Leone is holding an investment conference in London on Wednesday, showing even the world’s least developed countries can aspire to become emerging economies.
There are a few tentative signs of money going into the country, which was scarred by a 1991-2002 civil war.
CDC, the UK’s development finance arm, said last week it was investing $5 million in private equity in Sierra Leone, in small and medium-sized firms ranging from fishing to financial services.
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Billionaire investor George Soros also said his economic development fund was making “significant commitments” to Sierra Leone.
Soros, Sierra Leone president Ernest Bai Koroma and former UK prime minister Tony Blair all feature at Wednesday’s conference.
Koroma has been in power for the last two years and investors see some stability, which is good for investment.
The government fired two senior ministers earlier this month in an attempt to improve its record on fighting corruption.
A consortium led by Anadarko Petroleum made an oil find off the Sierra Leone coast earlier this year, and the country has diamonds and gold, but analysts say there is little scope for investment outside the mining sector.
The country lacks the financial markets needed to attract investment flows, analysts say.
”It’s probably pre-pre-pre-emerging,” says one emerging market analyst.
But as investors start once more to chase higher returns around the world, could Sierra Leone yet become a “frontier” emerging market?
http://blogs.reuters.com/globalinvesting/2009/11/16/sierra-leone-the-final-frontier/
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