The corrupt mainstream media is apparently hiding information that directly affects our freedoms for a reason.
The World Health Organization (WHO), an unelected global health organization that receives hundreds of millions of dollars a year from a foundation linked to billionaire Bill Gates, is moving forward with plans to increase its monitoring capabilities under international law.
The WHO is trying to push these increased surveillance powers through an international pandemic agreement that will impose legally binding conditions on its 194 member states (representing 98% of the world’s countries) if finalized.
The global health agency has been working on the agreement since 2021, and the WHO’s intergovernmental negotiating body (INB) held a meeting this week to discuss the recently released zero draft agreement.
The proposed extensions to WHO’s oversight powers are detailed in Article 18 (“One Health”) and Article 11 (“Strengthening and maintaining the preparedness and resilience of health systems)” of the treaty.
Article 18 instructs WHO member states to “strengthen multisectoral, coordinated, interoperable and integrated unified health surveillance systems”. One Health is a system that the WHO is trying to expand since the Covid pandemic. It uses connections between “human, animal and ecosystem health” to “create new methods of disease surveillance and control”.
Article 11 mandates member states to strengthen their surveillance functions for “epidemic investigation and control through interoperable early warning and alert systems.”
It also encourages member states to “establish global, regional and national genomic collaborative networks dedicated to epidemiological genomic surveillance and global sharing of emerging pathogens with pandemic potential”.
In addition to giving WHO new oversight powers, the agreement also strengthens its power and control over a wide range of international health work by requiring the unelected global health agency to be recognized as the “governing and coordinating body for international health work, in pandemic prevention, preparedness, response and recovery ”, and in gathering and creating scientific evidence and, in general, encouraging multilateral cooperation in global health management.”
Here we have obtained a copy of the zero draft of this international pandemic agreement for you.
The WHO INB will meet again from 3 to 6 April to continue discussions on the agreement. It plans to present the agreement to the World Health Assembly, the WHO’s decision-making body, in May and finalize the contract by May 2024.
While rejection of the agreement is growing, many WHO member states remain committed to the agreement.
If finalized, the agreement will be adopted through the international legislative process in accordance with Article 19 of the WHO Constitution. Unlike national laws, where elected officials vote on laws that affect their country, this lawmaking process involves mostly unelected diplomats who vote on the agreement.
This assumption of WHO surveillance powers follows WHO’s efforts to greatly expand its surveillance powers through proposed amendments to the International Health Regulations (2005). These amendments tell member states to build “collaborative surveillance networks” and include plans for global vaccine passports. WHO held a meeting on these proposed amendments last week and has scheduled another meeting in April to continue discussion of the amendments.
And it doesn’t end with surveillance. The unelected health agency also wants more influence on targeting “disinformation” and “disinformation” through the pandemic agreement and proposed changes to the International Health Regulations (IHR).
The WHO is making this push as evidence continues to vindicate those censored under Big Tech disinformation for sharing content that the Covid vaccine does not prevent transmission (experts now admit it does not prevent infection) and theories about lab leaks (government officials increasingly admit that Covid-19 probably appeared due to a leak from a laboratory in Wuhan.