The deal between von der Leyen and Bourla took place over text messages that, conveniently, have since "disappeared." We know the conversation took place in March 2021 when von der Leyen agreed to purchase Bourla's jabs over text in a deal worth around €35 billion.
The following January in 2022, the Pfizer jabs von der Leyen purchased were distributed across Europe, but the EC president's team was unable to ever find the text messages that facilitated all this.
"It is clear that these vaccines were ordered and forced on member states in unnecessarily large quantities," stated the Hungarian Government Information Center in response to a request for information about the scandal.
Pfizer and its partner BioNTech filed a lawsuit against the Hungarian government back in January over the purchase of some of the injections. The plaintiffs are demanding payment from Hungary for three million Pfizer-BioNTech mRNA (modRNA) injections worth around €60 million.
(Related: Back in the summer, von der Leyen called for global implementation of the Mark of the Beast: "the future is digital.")
According to EU Ombudsman Emily O'Reilly, von der Leyen deliberately obstructed her work by claiming to have not found any text messages between herself and Bourla. It was later claimed that there were never any text messages at all, but rather internal document registers that were too short-lived and thus are not covered by EU laws governing the retention of policy documents.
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EU commissioner Vera Jourová, who is strongly anti-Hungarian, had previously been suspected of corruption as well. Jourová defended von der Leyen, citing the short-lived nature of text messages.
O'Reilly, however, says the behavior of committee members did not comply with the EU's transparency law. They made no attempt to carry out any type of comprehensive investigation into the matter, either.
In her own defense, von der Leyen tried to state that she had no involvement in the negotiations to begin with, and that the text messages in question had no influence over the deal.
It is no wonder that von der Leyen has continually tried to downplay the importance of the text message negotiations seeing as how the Pfizer jab purchase she made caused a serious financial loss for the EU.
Under the terms of the mega-contract, Brussels agreed to purchase 900 million doses of jabs worth $35 billion between the end of 2020 and 2023. There is also an option to purchase an additional 900 million doses.
Hungary, by the way, is threatening to veto an €18 billion welfare package for Ukraine, sending shockwaves throughout the Western liberal block, including in Berlin, Brussels and Washington.
Leftist governments across Europe, including in Germany, are freaking out about Hungary's attempt to block more welfare cash flowing into the pockets of Volodymyr Zelensky. German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, for instance, claimed during a speech in Slovenia that Hungary's veto threat amounts to blackmail, and also accused Hungary of playing "poker" and using its "bag of tricks."
"There is no time for games now," Baerbock said. "If we are in a situation where peace in Europe is under threat, we must do everything we can every day and every hour to protect our people and, moreover, to protect Ukrainians."
More related news about COVID jabs can be found at Genocide.news.
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