‘Companies that enforced vaccine mandates set themselves up to be the state’s fall guys’ – Dr Herman Edeling

Loading player...
As the Covid-19 waves have decreased, various resultant issues, either ignored or wilfully bypassed in the midst of the pandemic frenzy and subsequent mass vaccination drive, are now coming into focus. Sharply. In July, BizNews published an article by veteran SA journalist Brian Pottinger in which he pointed out that those companies that implemented vaccine mandates may eventually have to face up to their accountability for sequential injury and even possible death resulting from these mandates. But what about the South African government’s culpability? To explore the culpability of both the state and companies that implemented vaccine mandates, BizNews spoke to Dr Herman Edeling. The esteemed neurosurgeon who specialises in a medico-legal practice succinctly laid out the case that the SA government’s move to indemnify vaccine manufacturers for adverse events and death occurring as a result of their vaccines was unquestionably unconstitutional and fraudulent – a fact which can be proven in court. Edeling spoke at length about a Covid-19 vaccination phenomenon which is currently evident across the globe and supported by data. A must watch interview. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
1 Sep 2022 10PM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

BN Daybreak: Iran war oil surge; Apple sues OpenAI; Endres on SA's fixed investment woes

In today's BizNews Daybreak we cover the escalating US-Iran conflict and its impact on soaring crude oil prices. In South Africa, Dr. John Endres critiques low fixed investment rates, SARU faces backlash over overpriced Springbok tickets, and over 53,000 undocumented foreign nationals are successfully repatriated. Finally, Apple hits OpenAI with…
13 Jul 11PM 18 min

BizNews Edge: Why the IRR's John Endres is more bullish on SA than Britain

John Endres, CEO of the Institute for Race Relations, tells BizNews that the elite consensus defending BEE is cracking, even as its beneficiaries defend it loudest. He points to the Starlink saga - blocked partly over empowerment shareholding while a pricier, slower rival wins state favour - as proof the…
13 Jul 8AM 24 min

A world-first: the bond that pays out when nature wins

In this BizNews interview, Irakli Rekhviashvili sits down with the three people behind FirstRand's R2.5 billion Cape Water Performance-Based Bond, the first time a commercial bank anywhere in the world has tied a bond's payout to nature. The Nature Conservancy's Louise Stafford traces it to 2018, when Cape Town's dams…
12 Jul 8AM 15 min