"Raptors" in the name of "Freedom": They had 1.8 billion doses of vaccines ready to send to the market - They closed the deals via sms so that the conversations would not be recorded!!!
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is asked to give explanations for the monstrous contracts signed by the European Commission with the pharmaceutical company Pfizer before the European Parliament.
In fact, the agreements for 1.8 billion doses from Pfizer alone were closed by sms! And at the same time they were handing out lockdowns while waiting for the vaccines with the intention of apparently creating anxiety and a psychological impact so that citizens would ask to come to do them and regain their freedom.
So in the wake of the Qatargate scandal, the members of the parliamentary committee on Covi-d-19 are asking for more transparency in the decisions of the EU, regarding the third and largest contract for the supply of vaccines, but also about the text messages he exchanged with the director Pfizer icon Albert Burla.
So far, neither the European Ombudsman nor the European Court of Auditors has been able to examine the contracts in question, while the European Public Prosecutor's Office, which is armed with legal powers that other supervisory agencies lack, has launched an investigation into the vaccine contracts, without to state whether the President of the Commission is a target.
However, according to the regulation of the European Parliament, only the president of the House can officially invite Ursula von der Leyen and this invitation has not yet reached the Commission.
At this point, the ball is passed to Roberta Metzola, president of the European Parliament, who is faced with the dilemma of whether to comply with the request of the MEPs and call the president or to "protect" Ursula von der Leyen from the hearing , which belongs to the same political family as Metsola, the European People's Party. The issue with contracts for the receipt of vaccines began in April 2021, when the American newspaper New York Times revealed that the president of the Commission and the director consultant of Pfizer had negotiated through "calls and messages" the supply of 1.8 billion doses of the vaccine against Co-vid -19.
The Commission did not elaborate on the messages, prompting the European Ombudsman, Emily O'Reilly, to request access to the confidential conversations.
In late June, the Commission said it could not locate the text messages exchanged between President von der Leyen and Mr Burla, while the Pfizer chief executive refused to attend a hearing before the parliamentary committee on Covi-d-19 to which he had been invited.
A choice that has angered several MEPs, who are considering banning access to the European Parliament of all representatives of the American pharmaceutical company Pfizer, which happened in 2017 when the environment committee (ENVI) voted to ban its officials of US agrochemical company Monsanto after it refused to participate in a public hearing.