Government representative claims coronavirus was created in a lab

Government representative claims coronavirus was created in a lab

Peter Kotlár, the government representative investigating the management of the pandemic, presented his first findings. He claims that the coronavirus was artificially created in a laboratory and deliberately spread around the world. In the fight against the pandemic, he criticized the inoculation with mRNA vaccines and widespread testing. Virologists disagree with part of Kotlár's analysis.

“The transmission from Wuhan was most likely ensured by the infection of those involved during the 2019 Military World Games in Wuhan. The most serious consequence of this entire contrived operation is the threat to human health and the verification of the naivety of the planet," says Kotlár.
"The scenario that it was an explicitly purposefully created virus, as a biological weapon, is not discussed at all. All the scientific knowledge we have indicates that the epicenter of the pandemic was the market in Wuhan," counters virologist Boris Klempa.

Peter Kotlár also criticizes the impact of vaccines against COVID-19 on people's health. According to him, over time, they cause a range of diseases. "Pathological pathways of mRNA preparations lead to inflammatory-thrombotic diseases, spontaneous abortions, sudden cardiac death, autoimmune diseases, neurological diseases, and changes in the human genome," continues Kotlár.
"In this, we should rely on the authorities designated for this. They unequivocally claim that these vaccines are safe," explains Klempa.

According to the plenipotentiary, even repeated nationwide testing for COVID-19 did not benefit the fight against the pandemic.

"Such biomedical nonsense. There is no professional justification that, in the presence of an infection, when isolation of the sick should be an unsurpassable standard, we gather the entire population in dry weather in autumn and then test it with imprecise tests," complains Kotlár.

The opposition argues that such an analysis of the pandemic was merely "throwing money out the window."

"He didn't present us with any evidence, nothing. It is pointless, as I underline, that we have official bodies here, such as the SAO, which have named exactly what the lessons from the pandemic should be," says Oskar Dvořák (PS), a member of the parliamentary committee for healthcare. Peter Kotlár will also review the state's management of the pandemic.

Source: STVR

Jeremy Hill, Photo: TASR

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