UK Covid-19 Inquiry Postpones Investigation into Vaccines Until After the Election
Can you guess why?
The UK is currently in the middle of its Covid Inquiry, which, whilst proving to be an absolute whitewash so far, has provided some interesting tidbits.
It has divided the inquiry into six investigations:
UK preparedness;
Core political decision-making;
Impact on healthcare systems;
Vaccines and therapeutics;
Procurement; and
The care sector
Investigation 4, looking at vaccines and therapeutics, was meant to start this summer but an announcement from the Chair, Baroness Hallett, yesterday means it has been postponed indefinitely.
They will now take place at a later date to enable organisations to prioritise providing evidence for the Inquiry’s third investigation on the impact of the pandemic on healthcare (Module 3).
Baroness Hallett said “I know the postponement of these hearings will be disappointing for some” and “I wish to reassure you that we will hold these hearings as soon as possible and I remain committed to not allowing the Inquiry hearings to run beyond my original aim of summer 2026”.
Many think the reason behind this announcement is to prevent the public from finding out about vaccine injuries and deaths.
But this isn’t the reason. The inquiry will find what it wants to find as we have already seen so far. If it wants to find that lockdowns worked and will work even better if they are enacted sooner and harder, they will. If they want to find that vaccines are safe and effective and have saved millions of lives, they will.
No, the reason that the investigation has been postponed can be deduced from the timing.
Witness hearings will be postponed until a later date, likely to be after the next general election.
UK Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak was a founding partner of the hedge-fund Theleme Partners which was a major investor in Moderna. He was also an executive managing its US office.
Although Sunak left the firm in 2013 to begin his political career, he has continually avoided answering the question as to whether he has retained any investment in the fund. If he does still own a stake in the fund, he would have massively profited from the rise in Moderna’s share price during the pandemic.
Because Theleme is registered in the Cayman Islands, a tax haven, it is impossible to obtain company information.
The Guardian reported that in 2019, Sunak declared in the list of ministers’ interests that he was the beneficiary of a blind trust but that the contents of the trust have not been disclosed to the public.
Up to 31 March 2022, Theleme made £109 million profit, up from £44 million the year before.
In 2020, Sunak hired a partner at Theleme, John Sheridan, to advise the UK Treasury on Covid policies.
Looking at Theleme’s investments we can see that Moderna and Wells Fargo are the largest investments, together worth $1.31 billion. Moderna represents 34.6% of their entire fund.
Now you can see why the vaccine investigation has been postponed until after the election which Sunak will be struggling in. Of course, he is innocent until proven guilty but you would think it would be an easy denial to make if he hadn’t profited from the massive government propaganda that meant Moderna’s share price shot up. Sunak has also promised to publish his tax returns but never quite seems to get around to it.
It's amazing that anyone trusts governments anymore.
The covid inquiry that died suddenly. /s