Roberto Speranza, formerly the country's health minister, is now facing a homicide probe from the Rome Public Prosecutor's Office over COVID-19 vaccine deaths. Based on emails from the Italian Medicines Agency (AIFA), the country's drug regulatory agency, Speranza was aware that COVID-19 vaccines could kill. Nicola Magrini, AIFA's former head, is also under investigation.
According to the Daily Expose, Speranza gave instructions to local health authorities not to reveal deaths or serious side effects caused by COVID vaccines. The move sought to "reassure" Italians that the vaccines are "safe," and to prevent the country's vaccination campaign from being jeopardized. (Related: Italy poised to prosecute AstraZeneca for deadly coronavirus vaccines.)
The public prosecutor launched the investigation following complaints to AIFA. It accused Speranza and Magrini of knowingly and deliberately exposing the unsuspecting Italian population to this risk by encouraging them to get vaccinated.
Reuters reported that on July 19, 2021, Speranza called on his fellow politicians to throw their weight behind the country's COVID-19 vaccination campaign. At the time, a recent rise in infections fueled by the B16172 delta variant had given a renewed sense of urgency to the vaccination program. The Italian government was concerned that almost 40 percent of Italy's adult population had not yet been injected.
"No political force can be ambiguous about vaccines. The relaunch and the future of the country depends on the vaccination campaign," said Speranza. He added that two-thirds of COVID-19 patients in intensive care units, as well as half of the patients being treated in ordinary wards, were unvaccinated.
"We are making these choices in order to restrict the unvaccinated as much as possible, as this is what is causing the burden on our hospital system," he told the Italian media. Speranza later stepped down from his post as health minister in October 2022 when incumbent Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni assumed power and was replaced by incumbent Health Minister Orazio Schillaci.
Italy has made it obligatory for people aged 50 or more to be vaccinated against COVID-19 as the country scrambled to ease pressure on hospitals and reduce deaths amid a dramatic surge in infections in January 2021. Business leaders had urged the government to make the vaccine mandatory for all workers because of fears that the latest wave of the pandemic could slow down the economy.
"We want to slow the growth of the infection curve and push Italians who are not yet vaccinated to get vaccinated," former Prime Minister Mario Draghi said, as reported by the ANSA news agency. "We are targeting the age groups, which are most at risk of hospitalization in order to reduce pressure on hospitals and save lives. At the same time, we want to keep schools and businesses open."
Vaccination was even made mandatory for certain professional groups. Consequently, many side effects, including fatal ones were revealed.
Despite this, Speranza still bragged about Italy's huge vaccine uptake. "We have now reached a massively significant percentage of vaccinated people in Italy, 89.41 percent. Therefore, currently in Italy, just over 10 percent of the population remains unvaccinated," he said.
Now, he and Magrini are expected to answer for their actions that caused many vaccine-related deaths and injuries.
Watch Dr. Sam Bailey recount the medical tyranny in Italy back in 2020 below.
This video is from the Vigilent Citizen channel on Brighteon.com.
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