Dr Aseem Malhotra, who has been invited to speak by Nigel Farage, believes deaths caused by mRNA jab are in the millions
One of Robert F Kennedy Jr’s health advisers will tell Reform members that Covid vaccines cause cancer at the party’s conference on Saturday.
Dr Aseem Malhotra, a British doctor who works on the US health secretary’s “Make America Healthy Again” campaign, is a prominent sceptic of mRNA vaccines and has been invited to the conference by
Nigel Farage.
He believes that Mr Farage supports his
plan to pause the rollout of all vaccines until they have been independently reviewed for side-effects, including cancer and heart problems.
Mr Kennedy Jr has recently
fired the entire board of vaccine advisers to the US government and cut $500m in state funding for mRNA vaccines, such as the Pfizer jab developed to tackle Covid.
Dr Malhotra, who criticised mass vaccination during the pandemic, now says that a new wave of “vaccine injured” patients will continue to strain the NHS.
“I think that a major driver of the stress on the system, since the pandemic, is not Covid – now it’s vaccine injury,” he said.
“Millions of people are walking around with all sorts of illnesses, and there needs to be a moratorium [on vaccines in the UK].”
He added that mRNA vaccines are causing “turbo cancers” in young people who were not at risk of serious harm from Covid because they interfere with “tumour-suppressing genes”.
“Serious harm or people who have died as a result of the Covid vaccine globally is in the millions,” he said.
Although it is now widely acknowledged that some Covid vaccines had significant side-effects, including some serious heart conditions, the claim that they are linked to cancer remains controversial.
The Office for National Statistics has previously said that it does not believe tens of thousands of excess deaths in the UK in 2022-23, which were attributed to vaccine-related cancer by some commentators, were actually caused by the jab.
A similar claim about vaccines and “turbo cancer” by the GB News broadcaster Neil Oliver last year prompted an investigation by Ofcom, but the watchdog concluded he was entitled to comment on the issue.
Dr Malhotra’s speech comes as Reform looks to develop a wider platform of policy, including on health issues, as part of its “next step” towards winning power.
He is also expected to call for Britain to leave the World Health Organisation – a position that Mr Farage and some other figures in his party have previously supported.
The party has previously maintained that the decision to receive vaccinations is a matter of individual choice.
Richard Tice, Reform’s deputy leader, last year called for a national inquiry into Covid-vaccine deaths, and said the UK had a “serious problem with excess deaths at the moment that nobody in the Government wants to talk about”.
“We need an inquiry not only into excess deaths but also into vaccine harms,” he said, adding: “It’s essential.”