Unfortunately, this is only lip service by the UN/WHO/NWO. The truth is, their true agenda is to reduce world population to 500,000,000--smaller numbers being easier to manange. They have a monument in Georgia which proudly states it. Sorry can't find that website at the moment with pictures.
What exactly is the UN/WHO doing for Africa? 25,000,000 are dying of Aids, and now we have a a new strain of AIDs and current drugs aren't working. They are only keep Eubola contained, but not curing it. Of course Africa is sitting on a ton of minerals, gold, and diamonds. Sick people can't fight back. The Africans are really having problems, and it promises to be a hot spot.
http://www.geocities.com/ramonthomas/chaos/home.htm
The UN/WHO/NWO wants to monitor internet Medical Sites. They are the same ones who got caught putting hCG in Tetanus given only to females of child bearing age in 3rd. world countries. It wasn't in this article, but when they got caught; they said it was a mistake--Really???
World Health Organization - WHO (toggle about 1/3 way down on the site): http://thewinds.arcsnet.net/arc_features/medical/abortions01-99.html
THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE RESEARCH WEBSITE ON THE NET-LOTS OF DOCUMENTED SOURCES AND LINKS PROVIDED: http://thewinds.arcsnet.net
It's from: http://thewinds.org
The UN/WHO/NWO are so loving, so caring about humanity -- Right!!!/S
: UN Says Entire World At Risk From Mad Cow
: By David Brough 1-27-01
: http://uk.news.yahoo.com/010126/80/ay5jq.html
: ROME (Reuters) - The United Nations warned the international
: community on
: Friday to act now to reduce the risk of mad cow disease,
: already widespread
: in European Union states.
: "The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has
: urged countries around
: the world, not just those in Western Europe, to be concerned
: about the risk
: of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) and its human form,
: the new variant
: Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD)," the Rome-based FAO
: said in a statement.
: "All countries which have imported cattle or meat and
: bone meal (MBM) from
: Western Europe, especially Britain, during and since the 1980s
: can be
: considered at risk from the disease," the U.N.'s
: Rome-based food body said
: So far Switzerland is the only nation outside the 15-nation
: bloc to report
: the appearance of BSE, FAO officials said. Several EU member
: states have
: reported cases.
: Many scientists believe humans may contract an equivalent form
: of the
: brain-wasting disease, vCJD, through eating infected beef.
: More than 80
: people in Britain and three in France have so far died of
: vCJD.
: The FAO, best known for its drive to reduce world hunger,
: wants states with
: big dairy industries, and which imported large quantities of
: MBM from
: countries hit by BSE, to consider banning the use of MBM in
: cattle feed.
: PRECAUTIONARY APPROACH
: "As an immediate measure, countries which have imported
: animals and MBM from
: BSE-infected trading partners should consider a precautionary
: ban on the
: feeding of MBM to ruminants (cattle, sheep, goats) or, to
: reduce the risk of
: infection even further, to all animals," the statement
: said.
: The EU has banned the use of MBM in animal feed for six months
: until June 30.
: Many scientists believe the use of MBM in cattle feed spreads
: BSE.
: The Middle East, eastern Europe, North Africa and India have
: the highest risk
: among countries outside Western Europe of harbouring mad cow
: disease, the FAO
: experts said.
: Foreign experts said the risk of mad cow disease in the
: Asia-Pacific region
: was remote despite data showing some countries bought
: potentially infected
: animal feed from Britain at the height of the UK epidemic.
: "I'd call it a highly remote possibility as the amounts
: we are talking about
: are small and they were more likely to have been fed to
: chickens or hogs
: rather than cattle," one foreign beef expert, who
: preferred not to be
: identified, told Reuters in Singapore.
: Ahmed Sidahmed, technical adviser with the U.N. International
: Fund for
: Agricultural Development (IFAD) in Rome, said he doubted many
: BSE cases would
: emerge in developing states as farmers tended to feed cattle
: on grass rather
: than MBM.
: "If animals are grazing, I don't think the BSE risk is
: that high," he told
: Reuters.
: However, he said that FAO's warning would encourage countries
: outside the EU
: to pursue farming practices in tune with nature to reduce and
: prevent the
: risk of BSE.
: Interviewed on Thursday, FAO experts encouraged countries to
: consider testing
: older cattle for BSE and banning the use of Specified Risk
: Materials (SRMs),
: such as cattle's eyes, spinal cords and brain tissue, if they
: identified BSE
: risks.
: Under tough new EU rules, all cattle aged over 30 months must
: be tested for
: BSE. The practice has already proved effective in uncovering
: cases of the
: disease.
: Germany said on Friday it planned to reduce the age limit for
: BSE tests in
: cattle to 24 months from 30.
: Germany registered 20 cases of mad cow disease since November,
: with the
: latest one found in the state of Schleswig-Holstein late on
: Thursday.
: The FAO said it was working with the U.N. World Health
: Organisation to draw
: up guidelines for safe feeding of livestock.
: "FAO, together with the World Health Organisation ...
: will hold an expert
: consultation in the near future to draw up advice for
: countries, particularly
: developing countries, to protect their people from vCJD, their
: livestock from
: BSE, and their industries from trade restrictions," the
: statement s