WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2026 Poal.co

942

Seven children died this week after being given experimental vaccines in Senegal, according to a report by the website ezone57.com. The website appears to be Ghana-based. The story has since been removed from the site and, somehow, removed from web archives as well. Censored by youtube and facebook

https://operation-nation.com/coronavirus-covid-19-vaccines-kill-seven-children-senegal-immediately-after-given-shots/

GlaxoSmithKline (7.4m) and Gates (327m) are top donors to the WHO which is covering for them

https://www.dr-rath-foundation.org/2019/01/world-health-organization-gates-foundation-now-second-largest-funder-after-u-s-government/

Seven children died this week after being given experimental vaccines in Senegal, according to a report by the website ezone57.com. The website appears to be Ghana-based. The story has since been removed from the site and, somehow, removed from web archives as well. Censored by youtube and facebook https://operation-nation.com/coronavirus-covid-19-vaccines-kill-seven-children-senegal-immediately-after-given-shots/ GlaxoSmithKline (7.4m) and Gates (327m) are top donors to the WHO which is covering for them https://www.dr-rath-foundation.org/2019/01/world-health-organization-gates-foundation-now-second-largest-funder-after-u-s-government/

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

It's likely total bs, I hate to say it but factcheck is probably right https://www.factcheck.org/2020/04/false-claim-of-deadly-coronavirus-vaccine-trial-in-africa/

The false claim appears to stem from a viral video that shows a crowd of people in a street near a police car. A French speaker in the video tells of a “serious scandal in Senegal.” Sharon Bell, an assistant professor of French translation at Kent State University, translated the video for FactCheck.org.

The speaker claims that “a guy … went into a house to vaccinate children against the problem of Coronavirus, the COVID-19. He vaccinated seven people, children. Seven children. They immediately died. They dropped dead.” It further says the police are on the scene.

But the speaker’s claims evidently were added to the original video, which told a very different story.

AFP Senegal found the video in a late March news report in that country — and it didn’t say that anybody had died. Instead, the video appeared in a story about the alleged arrest of two individuals claiming they had vaccines.

That video — which is in Wolof, a language spoken in Senegal — does not claim that any children died, according to Omar Ka, an associate professor of modern languages, linguistics and intercultural communication at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

So called video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJNdAd9T7zk

The original https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CjvCNekXpFY

“The difference between the French version and the Wolof one is that the latter does not talk about children being killed,” Ka told us in an email. “It simply states that an individual was caught trying to vaccinate people for COVID-19 and he was chased away, finding refuge at the neighborhood leader’s (Chef de Quartier, in French) house.”

Ka said that in the beginning of the French version, “you can clearly overhear the Wolof narrator, but he gets quickly overtaken by the French-speaking narrator.” The French version, he said, “definitely is not a translation of the Wolof version” — he said it adds more dramatic details, “talking about seven kids killed and the need in return to kill the individual.”

Multiple government agencies told AFP Senegal that one Senegalese man (not two people) was briefly arrested on March 26 in Dalifort, an area in the country’s capital of Dakar, and that he was selling cosmetics and hadn’t actually tried to vaccinate anyone. An armed forces ministry spokesman said the mishap occurred because the man was wearing a health ministry T-shirt and jokingly said he had vaccines, causing a stir. Police found that he only had cosmetic products.

One website in Ghana, ezone57.com, ran the video under the headline: “Coronavirus: COVID-19 Vaccine Killed 7 Children in Senegal(West Africa) [VIDEO].” That post garnered considerable attention, and its headline appeared in screenshots on Facebook, before the website took down the story and published another debunking the claim.

The falsehood circulated amid news reports about controversial remarks made by two French doctors who suggested vaccine trials should be conducted in Africa.

World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus referred to those comments as “racist,” saying during an April 6 press conference that “Africa cannot and will not be a testing ground for any vaccine.”

“We will follow all the rules to test any vaccines or therapeutics all over the world using exactly the same rule,” he said. “Whether it’s in Europe, Africa or wherever — we will use the same protocol.”

“The hangover from a colonial mentality has to stop,” he said.