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Thread: Big Pharma Funded Anti-US Militia In Iraq, US Veterans File Major Lawsuit

  1. #1

    Big Pharma Funded Anti-US Militia In Iraq, US Veterans File Major Lawsuit

    Big Pharma Funded Anti-US Militia In Iraq, US Veterans File Major Lawsuit

    OCTOBER 18, 2017
    BY HUNY BADGER

    Several US veterans and relatives of soldiers killed or wounded in Iraq sued five pharmaceutical and medical equipment makers on Tuesday, accusing them in effect of funding an Iraqi terrorist militia that killed hundreds of American soldiers following the 2003 US-led invasion.

    The civil lawsuit, filed in federal court in Washington, accuses the multinationals of routinely bribing Iraqi Ministry of Health officials to win drug contracts when the office was controlled by the virulently anti-American Jaysh al-Mahdi, or Mahdi Army.

    Named in the suit are the parent companies and subsidiaries of Astra-Zeneca, General Electric, Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer and Roche Holding. “Defendants’ corrupt transactions aided and abetted Jaysh al-Mahdi’s terrorist operations against Americans in Iraq,” the lawsuit alleges.

    The lawsuit includes 27 pages of itemized deaths and injuries that US military personnel suffered in Mahdi Army attacks from 2005 to 2009 as well as claims of suffering by their relatives. Led by Muqtada al-Sadr, the radical cleric, the Shia militia was backed by Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Lebanese terror outfit, Fox News reports.

    “My hope is that we can get justice for my brother’s death and for so many others who didn’t have to die in Iraq,” said Ami Neiberger-Miller, a plaintiff. Christopher Neiberger, a tank gunner, was killed in Baghdad on August 6, 2007, three days after his 22nd birthday, when the Mahdi Army detonated an explosive designed to penetrate tank armor.

    Corporate bribery helped fund the Mahdi Army’s acquisition of weapons, training and logistical support, the lawsuit claims. The health ministry and the terror group were so intertwined that US officials labelled the militia the “pill army” — a nod to Mr Sadr’s habit of paying young troops with drugs they could resell rather than cash, the suit alleges.

    Among goods sold to Iraq were Seroquel, Astra-Zeneca’s anti-psychotic; GE electrocardiogram machines; J&J catheters and anti-epilepsy drugs; Depo-Provera, Pfizer’s birth control shot; and Herceptin, Roche’s breast cancer drug, the lawsuit claims. As Iraq descended into sectarian violence, the ministry’s political allegiance was unmistakable.

    Portraits of Mr Sadr and banners reading “Death to America” were hung on walls in the building and AK-47 assault rifles littered the minister’s office, the lawsuit says. By late 2004, the ministry was too dangerous for Americans to enter and “functioned more as a terrorist apparatus than a health organization”, the lawsuit says.

    Pfizer denies any wrongdoing. “Our mission is to provide medicines to patients to help better their lives,” said spokeswoman Allyanna Anglim. Roche declined to comment as it said it had not yet been served. After becoming aware of the lawsuit when it was filed on Tuesday, GE was “thoroughly reviewing the allegations”, said Jennifer Friedman, a spokeswoman.

    Astra-Zeneca and J&J did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The lawsuit resulted from an investigation by Sparacino & Andreson and Kellogg, Hansen, Todd, Figel & Frederick, the Washington law firms, which relied on 12 confidential witnesses that the lawyers said had direct knowledge of the bribery scheme.

    Routine bribery originated during the UN oil-for-food program, which allowed Iraq to sell oil in return for food and humanitarian goods while under sanctions imposed on Saddam Hussein following the first Gulf war.

    “Most of the defendants have a documented history of paying bribes that supported terrorism under Saddam,” said Ryan Sparacino, one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys. J&J in 2011 paid $70m to settle US criminal and civil charges that its subsidiaries had paid kickbacks to win contracts in Iraq and other countries. GE paid more than $23m in 2010 to settle Securities and Exchange Commission charges that it had paid kickbacks for health ministry contracts under the oil-for-food program.

    Mahdi agents required foreign companies to pay commissions equal to 20 per cent of a contract’s value, which the drug and equipment makers did by providing “free goods” on top of those purchased, the suit says.

    Each of the companies provided bribes worth millions of dollars annually, the lawsuit says from 2004 through 2013, the companies also created a “slush fund” ostensibly designed to pay for after-sales support, but which really went into the pockets of corrupt ministry officials, the lawsuit says.

    The lawsuit accuses the companies of violating the Anti-Terrorism Act and seeks damages. Congress last year expanded corporations’ civil liability under the law in response to demands from relatives of victims of the September 11, 2001 terror attacks.

    Under that legislation, plaintiffs must show that the terror attacks were conducted by an organization formally designated by the US government as a terrorist group. The Mahdi Army does not meet that definition, but the lawsuit says that its attacks in Iraq were “planned and authorized by Hezbollah”, which the US has labelled a terror group since 1997.

    Amir Toumaj, research analyst at Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said the Mahdi Army received support from Hezbollah beginning at least as early as 2003. “They received training, equipment and extra skills such as in irregular warfare,” he said. “I wouldn’t say they were controlled by Hezbollah but they received support.” The companies also used the US banking system to funnel dollars to Iraq to pay the alleged bribes, the suit adds.

    AFF’s Huny Badger is a Veteran who served our country as an Army Combat Medic.
    https://www.americasfreedomfighters....zen.yandex.com
    “The spirits of darkness are now among us. We have to be on guard so that we may realize what is happening when we encounter them and gain a real idea of where they are to be found. The most dangerous thing you can do in the immediate future will be to give yourself up unconsciously to the influences which are definitely present.” ~ Rudolf Steiner



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  3. #2
    I wonder how many of these families trust big pharma vaccines for their children and themselves?

  4. #3
    Huny Badger the Medic? lol? [OK its not duffel bag. This checks I guess...]

    I hope sue hard, don't settle, and win. If only to make a point how ridiculous it is that USG arm and establish combatants and strongmen for momentary gains, then ramrod sanctions up their asses through Congress, declare war on them, and feign shock when people in their network are cutting deals with said radicals to conduct the sort of business in these countries they could have had if USG hadn't been in the business of actually creating enemies.



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