Anonymous ID: 6e6d8f Jan. 28, 2019, 2:22 p.m. No.4943024   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/New-Film-Reveals-Plot-to-Infect-Black-South-Africans-with-Aids-20190127-0023.html

the documentary, Cold Case Hammarskjöld, revealed Black people received "false injections" of Aids in the 80s and 90s.

A new Sundance documentary has revealed that a paramilitary group allegedly attempted to spread Aids to South Africa’s Black communities during the 1980s and 1990s.

A former intelligence officer with the South African Institute of Maritime Research (SAIMR), Alexander Jones, was party to a clandestine racist agenda set by the group’s leader, Keith Maxwell, to trick Black South Africans to receive “medical treatment” thereby spreading the virus.

In the documentary, Cold Case Hammarskjöld, Jones- who had little to no medical qualifications- confessed to masquerading as a doctor and treating the poor, lower class Black communities.

“What easier way to get a guinea pig than [when] you live in an apartheid system? Black people have got no rights, they need medical treatment. There’s a white ‘philanthropist’ coming in and saying, ‘You know, I’ll open up these clinics and I’ll treat you.’ And meantime [he is] actually the wolf in sheep’s clothing,” Jones said in the documentary which premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

Members of the community testified to the “strange treatments” and “false injections” offered by the doctor, whose name remains bolted on his former place of practice in the city of Putfontein.

Filmmaker Mads Brügger and co-producer Andreas Rocksen discovered evidence of the plan when investigating the suspicious death of then-U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjöld who died in a mysterious explosion in 1961 before his plane touched down in Zambia.

According to letters headed with the SAIMR logo, the CIA and British intelligence allegedly agreed that Hammarskjöld, who was a supporter of decolonization “should be removed,” the post-Apartheid South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission said in 1998.