South Africans attack Matthias Rath over HIV/AIDS
Matthias Rath is one of the best in the business after studying with Dr.Linus Pauling the world's greatest modern day Chemist. This article is a Medical Mafia onslaught of the good work of Mr.Rath. They show themselves up when they comment on anti-retrovirals having large benefits outweighing the bad sides. Nothing about Anti-retroviral drugs is good or benefitting, they are poisonous and toxic and give the symptoms & then death just like AIDS. Nutrition is all thats needed in the 3rd world countries and in the west we need to lower drug use like Crack and stop taking steroids and AZT/ARV's medicines etc.
They also claim in this article that HIV deniers are a danger to the population. The real danger are the people behind the fraud of keep telling people that HIV causes AIDS. The same people who make fraudulent tests with over 60+ FALSE positives. The same people that claim most Africans are dying of AIDS when infact they have never been tested as the tests are too expensive and would flag HIV anyhow especially with the Malaria antibodies in the African. The poor Africans are left to do die of malnutrition, dehydration and unhygenic living and drinking. Almost all the normal years old African illnesses are simply now classed as AIDS to suit the agenda. Everything you need to see this scam and fraud is available here; http://www.virusmyth.net/aids
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AIDS Activists Go After
Vitamin Salesman
By CLARE NULLIS, Associated Press Writer
Sat May 14, 2:12 AM
http://www.comcast.net/news/health/index.jsp?cat=HEALTHWELLNESS&fn=/2005/05/1...
CAPE TOWN, South Africa - A South African court on Friday opened a hearing against a self-styled nutrition guru who claims that anti-retroviral medicines are poisonous and that his own "natural" multivitamin therapies are more effective against the AIDS virus.
An AIDS activist group, The Treatment Action Campaign, had filed a petition with the Cape High Court against Matthias Rath, a German-born doctor who has a California-based foundation and claims tiny doses of natural nutrients can cure everything from heart disease to AIDS.
"The Rath Foundation is preying on vulnerable people with life-threatening illnesses with two aims: to sell their products and to support the HIV denialists who have caused enormous damage to our country," the Action Campaign said in a statement.
It accused him of sowing fear among the poor and the sick to sell his "extortionately" priced multivitamin compounds.
The case has stirred passions in this country with the highest number of HIV infected people in the world, or about 5.3 million at the end of 2003, and where an estimated 600 to 1,000 people die of AIDS every day. The hearing had to be delayed after it began because of noise from demonstrators outside the courtroom.
Judge Siraj Desai told the packed session the court was not being called upon to decide on the efficacy or safety of anti-retrovirals versus "natural" therapies, but to determine whether to order a stop to Rath's allegations.
The clashing viewpoints highlighted the complexities of treating AIDS in many African countries which have long relied on medicinal plants and natural remedies and which lack the infrastructure taken for granted by industrialized countries.
Rath, who attended the court session denied the charges and accused the Action Campaign of trying "to publicly discredit our foundation and slander me personally."
After Friday's session, the case was adjourned until May 26.
The United Nations has joined the criticism against Rath for his full-page advertisements in international media touting his company's vitamin supplements and claiming that anti-retroviral medicines are toxic.
"These advertisements are wrong and misleading," said a statement received Thursday from the World Health Organization, the U.N. Children's Fund and UNAIDS. Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health also condemned Rath last week, saying he twisted the findings of their research to advocate his position.
Scientists have found that while there are side effects to anti-retroviral drugs, such as nausea, diarrhea, rashes and abdominal pain, those are far outweighed by the benefits of treatment.
The Action Campaign intended to use an anti-defamation law to target Rath's business in South Africa. The hearing Friday asked for a temporary order for Rath to cease referring to the campaign as a front for multinational pharmaceutical companies, pending a full defamation suit which the group hoped to launch later this year.
The group is also pressing the government's regulatory authority, the Medicines Control Council, to clamp down on Rath and stop what the group alleges are illegal experiments on humans in poor townships.
The Medicines Control Council said in a statement to the South African Press Association earlier this week that it was investigating the vitamin dealer, but declined to speculate on whether it would take action and close down his operations.
"Rath is more active in South Africa than anywhere else in the world because of senior political leaders flirting with quackery and denialism," said Nathan Geffen, an Action Campaign spokesman. Geffen said health activists hoped that the increased public criticism of Rath would finally shame South African authorities into action.
Rath, who has offices in Germany, the Netherlands and Santa Clara, Calif., maintains that chronic shortage of micronutrients is to blame for a wide variety of ailments, including heart disease, strokes, cancer and AIDS. These diseases "will essentially be unknown in the future" if his theories about natural therapies and food supplements are put into practice at a global level, he insists.
"The HIV/AIDS epidemic has become one of the greatest threats to mankind ever," he says on his Web site. "This human tragedy has become a multibillion-dollar market for the pharmaceutical investment business - the drug cartel - in which the return on investment is based on the continuation of the AIDS epidemic," he maintains.