Fringe Anti-vax Group Claims Court Challenge of Pfizer Vaccine – But No Papers Have Been Served on South African Government
Vials of Pfizer´s COVID-19 vaccine. COVID vaccines mostly reached in or around the regions they were produced, a WHO report finds.

A South African group that promotes anti-Semitic conspiracy theories claims to have issued a high court application to challenge the authorisation of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine by the country’s health minister and regulatory authority – but the health department has not been served with any legal papers.

In a recent publicity drive, the Freedom Alliance of South Africa (FASA) released papers it claims to have lodged in the country’s high court calling the authorisation of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine “unlawful”, and naming the South African health minister, regulatory authority SA Health Products Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA) and Pfizer amongst its respondents.

But South African health department spokesperson Foster Mohale said that while the department had heard of the case “we have not received court papers on this matter”.

Meanwhile, Willis Angira, Pfizer’s external communications manager for East and Southern Africa declined to comment saying: “Unfortunately we cannot comment on ongoing legal proceedings”.

The 736-page “court documents” also have no court number or stamp indicating that they have actually been lodged in court.

FASA appears to be part of the international anti-vaccine movement, and cites as supporters of their case a number of outspoken critics of COVID-19 vaccines such as UK cardiologist Dr Aseem Malhotra, Prof Norman Fenton, Jessica Rose and Dr James Thorp.

Bizarre conspiracies

FASA promotes a range of extreme conspiracy theories on its website, including that the world is run by Freemasons who “sold their souls to satanic Jewish bankers”, and together they orchestrate wars, “conspire for world domination” and “subvert the West”.

They have also published articles on their website claiming that the COVID-19 vaccines contain artificial intelligence “synbio” aimed at “transforming humanity to Human version 2.0”, and that these react to WiFi and 4G, and assemble microchips in people’s bloodstreams.

FASA’s Telegram channel makes claims about vaccines making you magnetic or emitting Bluetooth signals, and bizarre 5G conspiracy theories about streetlights.

In the section on international partners, FASA includes the logo of Save the Children, but a spokesperson for that organisation said that “we are in no way associated with FASA – this is not a campaign that we support”.

Despite its logo appearing on the group’s website, Save the Children has no links with the anti-vaccine group in South Africa.

International vaccine court challenges

Meanwhile, in the US, renowned anti-vaxxer Robert F Kennedy Jr and his organisation, the Children’s Health Defense, are suing a number of news organizations fighting misinformation, including the BBC, Washington Post, Associated Press and Reuters.

They claim that these outlets have censored “alternative COVID narratives”, and that they have been “censored, de-monetized, demoted, throttled, shadow-banned, and/or excluded entirely from platforms like Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, and Linked-In.”

Kennedy’s group has opted to bring the case in the jurisdiction of ultra-conservative Texas judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, who recently ruled that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had erred by authorising abortion pill mifepristone.

Image Credits: Photo by Mat Napo on Unsplash.

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