Bill Gates involved in dengue fever outbreak?

Bill Gates involved in dengue fever outbreak?


In recent years, dengue fever has also become an epidemic worldwide. Dengue is actually a virus that spreads through mosquitoes. The virus first infects the brain's membranes, after which the organs gradually stop functioning. If this condition is not treated in a timely manner, the death of the affected patient can also occur. According to a careful estimate, more than 500 million people suffer from dengue fever every year worldwide, and more than 20,000 people die from the disease annually. However, the ratio of timely treatment to recovery is very high and 99% of patients are fully recovered from the disease.
Bill Gates involved in dengue fever outbreak?

Bill Gates involved in dengue fever outbreak?


There are 38 types of mosquitoes that spread the dengue virus worldwide, while only one of them is found in Pakistan. Scientists get help from a germ called "woolba" to prevent mosquito bites that carry the dengue virus. The germ found inside the common brown mosquito was discovered in 1924 by Marshall Herrick and Simon Woolbeck. But since this germ did not cause any disease, it did not receive any special significance, and after twelve years it was named "Woolbaka" by the scientists who discovered it. It took decades for biologists to discover how special these bacteria are. In particular, there is no denying that mosquitoes that carry the dengue virus spread and in recent years, the germ has received considerable worldwide support for the dengue virus.

conspiracy theory

But, unfortunately, this conspiracy theory spread around the world that "wolbaka" itself is a virus that is even more dangerous to human life than dengue, and this founder, Microsoft founder Bell Gates. Has been developed, which aims to reduce the world's growing population. Although Bill Gates was not born at the time "Woolbaka" was discovered, this conspiracy theory was accepted in many countries around the world, despite the fact that over the past few years. The World Health Organization is facing severe difficulties in dengue-dengue, as people in Latin America and many African countries have turned against mosquito-borne mosquitoes that spread the "woolba" virus. In those countries, dengue is once again raising its head.

In 2008, when dengue fever became a pandemic in Pakistan, a conspiracy theory regarding dengue fever continued to circulate on social media for a long time. A Facebook viral post was cited as a screenshot of a research report published on February 5, 1982, in Russia's leading newspaper LiteraryNews on dengue fever, revealing that an American center in Lahore was investigating mosquitoes. Is working The center is run by scientists from the US CIA and the American University of Maryland, headed by CIA official David Nelson, while the center is named after the Pakistani Medical Research Center, whose primary responsibility is To develop a dengue virus that can be injected into any animal and then sent to Afghanistan where it bites other mosquitoes and they also become dengue virus carriers.

Following the Russian accusations, several newspapers in Europe and America published the news, in response to which a special article was published in the British Research Journal that the report of the Russian newspaper was not true and the facts were different. Because Pakistan Medical Research Center is in Karachi and not in Lahore. Thus, the premise of the report went wrong. In addition, the program launched by the University of Maryland, USA, actually operates in Lahore under the name "Maleria eradiction center". Apparently, it was aimed at protecting Pakistanis from malaria, which was run by another US company called USAID, not the CIA. The company was established in Lahore in 1975. The good thing is that we Pakistanis did not take any notice of this false post spread on social media and finally, due to the efforts of the former Chief Minister Punjab Mian Shahbaz Sharif and the administration, Pakistan completely controlled the dengue virus in 2009. ۔
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