What's going on in India?Statistical fraud, government agencies out of control...
However, many people are questioning HIV and AIDS there.
JACK is an organization that has helped raise awareness in India. Their campaign has been very successful. See their page for the latest news stories and more information. JACK is Joint Action Council Kannur.new to this website: a booklet from JACK called, "HIV/AIDS Industry: Agenda Behind the Epidemic."
Also, this news story (from the Virus Myth website) introduced Americans to JACK and the Indian dissident movement. "A Brief Report Upon The AIDS Dissident International Conference in India"- by Roberto Giraldo. Feb. 2000.
Frontline magazine has published this fantastic article that raises questions about the use of Nevarapine and AZT in women and children. Programmes and pitfalls - Mar. 16 - 29, 2002. "The National AIDS Control Organisation's programme to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV fails to take into account the serious side-effects of the drugs that are under consideration."
Here's a story from the Feb. 25, 2002 online edition of Outlook Magazine, outlookindia.com - more statistics nightmares! Back From the Dead - from Davinder Kumar.
See this story from theIndian Express, from Saturday, January 19, 2002. "NGOs punch holes into UN agency?s AIDS estimates."
The Times of India is read by more people than any other national newspaper in India. Read this front-page story from June 22, 2001 : "A controversy is brewing over the number of AIDS-related deaths in India." Official statistics say that there are 560,000 AIDS orphans, yet there were 17,000 AIDS deaths. India's AIDS figures don't add up.
This story examines the "ELISA" HIV test. Read this scanned version of the story also from the Times of India in Delhi, from May 30, 2001. This article is devastating! I'll wager that many people in India are doing some hard thinking about these worthless tests. (jpeg, 158k.)
Here's another scanned story from the Times of India Bombay. It's a "mainstream" story that seems to promote the use of AIDS drugs, but there's a small inset that describes the horrible side effects of AZT. (jpeg, 108k)
Here are more incredible articles, also from Times of India (Bombay) - from May 29 & June 4, 2001- this series discusses toxic cocktail therapies and explains why HIV tests do not look for a virus. Journalists in India have an advantage over writers for US corporate-controlled newspapers. This story comes to you from the original AIDS rethinking website, virusmyth.com
Here is a story from The Hindu, May 13, 2001.
It's about huge pharmaceutical companies in India. They would love to cash in on AIDS there and in Africa.
This is from Frontline Magazine, Volume 18 - Issue 10, May 12 - 25, 2001 - The AIDS Divide - A friend says,"... Frontline magazine has given extensive coverage to the Presidential AIDS Panel Report. This is the only objective report on the issue in India. The other news so far consisted of small misleading news items picked up from Reuters or AP releases."
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