âThe Treaty is Doneâ: WHO Pandemic Treaty Defeated, at Least For Now
Negotiators failed to submit final texts of the WHOâs pandemic agreement and amendments to the International Health Regulations before the May 24 deadline, but some critics of the proposals warned against celebrating prematurely.
Negotiators failed to submit final texts of the WHOâs pandemic agreement and amendments to the International Health Regulations before the May 24 deadline, but some critics of the proposals warned against celebrating prematurely.
Negotiations for the World Health Organizationâs (WHO) proposed âpandemic agreementâ â or âpandemic treatyâ â and amendments to the International Health Regulations (IHR) have failed, for now at least.
The New York Times reported that negotiators failed to submit final texts of the two documents before the May 24 deadline for consideration and a vote at this yearâs World Health Assembly taking place this week in Geneva, Switzerland.
The WHO said the proposals are intended to prepare for the ânext pandemic.â
But critics called the proposals a global âpower grabâ that threatened national sovereignty, health freedom, personal liberties and free speech while promoting risky gain-of-function research and âhealth passports.â
âSticking points,â according to The Times, included âequitable access to vaccines and financing to set up surveillance systems.â
Instead of considering a full set of proposals from both documents, a more modest âconsensus package of [IHR] amendmentsâ will be presented this week, according to the proposed text of the Working Group on Amendments to the International Health Regulations (2005) (WGIHR).
The text states:
âThe text does not represent a fully agreed package of amendments and is intended to provide an overview of the current status and progress of the WGIHRâs work. âŠ
âThe mandate of the WGIHR Co-Chairs and Bureau has now ended but we stand ready to support the next steps agreed by the Seventy-seventh World Health Assembly, including facilitating any further discussions if so decided.â
The final report of the International Negotiating Body (INB) for the âpandemic agreement,â dated May 27, states âThe INB did not reach consensus on the text.â
Mary Holland, CEO of Childrenâs Health Defense (CHD), credited global opposition to the WHOâs proposals for shutting them down. She told The Defender:
âIt is a huge tribute to civic action that the WHO treaty and regulations have apparently failed. While delegates to the World Health Assembly are still engaged in last-minute negotiations, outside of approved procedures they do not have a consensus to move forward with a legal infrastructure to conduct COVIDoperations.
âThis is great news for the worldâs citizens and shows us how powerful we can be when we work together creatively.â
The Times reported that negotiators plan to ask for more time. According to The Straits Times, âCountries have voiced a commitment to keep pushing for an accord.â
Opening the World Health Assembly on Monday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus suggested efforts to finalize the two proposals will continue.
âWe all wish that we had been able to reach a consensus on the agreement in time for this health assembly and crossed the finish line,â Tedros said, in remarks quoted by The Straits Times. âBut I remain confident that you still will, because where there is a will, there is a way.â
Internist Dr. Meryl Nass, founder of Door to Freedom â an organization working to defeat the WHOâs proposals â celebrated the news and suggested the WHOâs efforts have failed irreversibly.
âThe treaty is done,â Nass wrote on Substack. âNothing in the treaty can rise from the ashes of the negotiations to be voted on this week.â She characterized the news as a âfirst roundâ win âin the war of democracy versus one-world government.â
WHO proposals ârolled out through lies and stealthâ
Negotiations failed despite efforts by Tedros and others to persuade negotiators and WHO member states to agree on the two texts in time for a vote at the World Health Assembly.
At the World Economic Forumâs annual meeting in January, Tedros warned of the pandemic threat posed by a yet-unknown âDisease Xâ and said the pandemic agreement âcan help us to prepare for the future in a better way because this is about a common enemy.â
In March, over 100 former world leaders, including former U.K. prime minister Tony Blair â a proponent of âvaccine passportsâ and digital ID â signed a letter urging WHO member states to finalize negotiations on the âpandemic agreement.â
Biden administration officials negotiating on behalf of the U.S. also pushed for the two documents to be finalized.
Loyce Pace, assistant secretary for global affairs at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, told The Times. âThose of us in public health recognize that another pandemic really could be around the corner.â
In December 2023, Pace testified before Congress in support of the two documents. âItâs only a matter of time before the world faces another serious public health threat,â she said, noting the U.S. role in drafting some of the proposed IHR amendments.
But according to Nass, the entire pandemic preparedness project has been rolled out through âlies and stealth.â
âGlobalists created legal documents replete with euphemisms and flowery language, always disguised to hide the documentsâ true intentions,â she said. âBut we saw through them and didnât let them get away with it.â
Nass wrote that the âconsensusâ on the IHR proposals delivered to the World Health Assembly are âthe flowery language ones, not the meaningful ones.â
There is one exception, Nass said. Referring to Article 5 of the IHR amendments, she noted that âthe negotiators were fine telling nations to surveil their citizens and combat misinformation and disinformation.â
âNearly all governments are already surveilling and propagandizing us,â Nass said. âSo, while this provision is odious, it really doesnât change anything.â
She also noted that while consensus was reached on Article 18, the implementation of âhealth passportsâ and other similar documents during a health emergency is now a ârecommendationâ instead of a requirement. Definite language â such as the word âshallâ â has been removed from the text.
âThey are not going to go awayâ
Other legal experts and health freedom advocates welcomed the news but said the WHO will likely continue pushing for the two proposals.
Australian attorney Katie Ashby-Koppens, who helped advocate for New Zealandâs rejection of a previous set of IHR amendments last year, told The Defender, âI donât know that we should be celebrating the failure to reach agreement at this stage as a milestone.â
Journalist James Roguski told The Defender, âMember nations and the WHO have not given up. To the contrary, they have every intention of continuing in their attempts to finalize the negotiations.â
âNow is not the time to celebrate,â Roguski continued. âNow is the time to come together in order to take focused and massive action.â
Dutch attorney Meike Terhorst told The Defender, âAccording to my information, if the pandemic agreement fails, then they can continue negotiations later this year, with the view of trying again at next yearâs World Health Assembly.â
âGiven the WHO/World Health Assembly is a law unto themselves, and they desperately want these treaty reforms to pass, then the mandate to continue and finalize their negotiations may be extended,â Ashby-Koppens said.
Francis Boyle, J.D., Ph.D., professor of international law at the University of Illinois, told The Defender the WHOâs proposals were âthe first time ⊠that globalists spent an enormous amount of time, effort, money and brainpower to construct a worldwide totalitarian police state under the guise of protecting public health.â
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Boyle said:
âThe WHO wonât back down from its proposals easily. They are not going to go away. They have come this far, and they will keep at it until they get their objective by hook or by crook. The only way to protect ourselves from these globalists is to pull out of the WHO.â
But Nass believes the WHO may encounter difficulty in bringing back its proposals, telling The Defender it would be âunlikely to get far with either document unless they are pared down to what does not actually matter much to any nation.â
âI expect they will patch together a few [proposals] and vote yes and claim victory. But their major desires are all smashed,â Nass said. âThey needed secrecy and ignorance, and they lost those advantages.â
Experts told The Defender a key factor in the WHOâs failure to achieve consensus on the two proposals was opposition from several nations â and by people worldwide.
âPeople and politicians around the world were educated about what was really being negotiated, what was really in the documents,â Nass said.
On Saturday, CHD participated in a rally against the WHO proposals, across from the United Nations headquarters in New York.
Watch Mary Holland speak at the New York rally:
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