Monday, March 9, 2015

Catholic Health Commission in Kenya


Vaccine Contamination Demands Action from the Kenyan Ministry of Health



Steve Mosher and Anne Roback Morse
Population Research Institute


On February 13th, the Kenyan Conference of Catholic Bishops stated that the controversy over whether a tetanus vaccine had been laced with a sterilizing agent was an issue of national security and demanded that the Kenyan Ministry of Health cooperate in a continuing investigation to analyze the vaccine vials.

Last year, a nationwide vaccination campaign used a tetanus vaccine that was found to be laced with a sterilizing agent known as Beta HCG. The vaccination campaign in question is being jointly organized and funded by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF), which also supplied the vaccines in question. Lab results from AgriQ-Kenya found significant traces of the sterilizing agent in three of the vaccine vials. Despite these findings, the Kenyan Ministry of Health declared the vaccine safe and continued the vaccination campaign. The Catholic Health Commission in Kenya demanded an explanation for the contaminate vaccines before continuing the campaign.

The testing of the tetanus vaccine samples was authorized late last year by a joint committee of experts from the Ministry of Health and the KCCB. But after AgriQ released the lab report, which showed significant contamination in three of the vials, the Ministry of Health recommended that the campaign continue, while the KCCB demanded that the contamination question be resolved first.

The KCCB released a statement publicly urging the Ministry of Health to get to the bottom of the issue, pointing out that “When sterility is induced in any woman, without her knowledge and/or consent, it amounts to a monumental human rights abuse.” The president of the Population Research Institute, Steven Mosher, concurred, declaring that “The women of Kenya deserve a credible explanation for how the vaccines came to be contaminated. Even one woman sterilized without her consent is one too many. It is important for the health of women and families in Kenya that mothers be able to trust their healthcare providers.”

Whatever the final outcome of this controversy, Kenyan health providers and the Ministry of Health have a duty to resolve all concerns and to restore confidence in vaccinations. Kenyan women are likely to remain wary of receiving immunizations as long as the Ministry of Health ignores the reality that some of the tetanus vaccine samples used in its vaccination campaign were contaminated with significant levels of βHcg. Women should not have to worry that submitting to vaccination—which is supposed to protect their future children from contracting neonatal tetanus at birth—will instead render them sterile.

It should be noted that the Catholic Church in Kenya does not oppose vaccines in general. The National Executive Secretary of the Catholic Health Commission of Kenya, Jacinta Mutegi, told PRI, “The Catholic Church in Kenya and indeed all Bishops in Kenya support and continue to invest in regular immunization programmes for Kenyans. The Church has since before [Kenyan] independence focused on making a contribution towards full immunization coverage.”

“The Church in Kenya has only raised concerns over the recent mass tetanus immunization programme that was only targeting all women of between 14 – 49 years (women in their reproductive age),” she told PRI. “We have no reason to query all the other regular immunization programmes whatsoever.”

It is not unreasonable for Kenyan women to be concerned that they might be sterilized without their foreknowledge or consent. It is difficult for Western readers to understand the fear provoked by forced sterilization campaigns in the developing world, but for millions of women around the world, “family planning” is a euphemism for top-down, autocratic, and frequently violent population control.

  • Last month, we published statistics showing that millions of Kenyan women were given hormonal contraception without their informed consent. 
  • In the Philippines, couples seeking a marriage license must first present a “certificate of compliance” from a local family planning office. For every dollar the US spends on maternal and child health in the Philippines, the US spends $13 on “family planning,” with a focus on disabling female reproductive systems. 
  • Communist China strictly controls the fertility of its people. The family planning police—in and of itself an alien notion to many Western minds—routinely abort and sterilize women who are pregnant outside the state plan. 
  • In India, state governments set yearly targets for sterilizations and hold sterilization camps to meet these targets. The result? Half of all Indian women are sterilized by the age of 35. 

Based on the lab results, the Catholic Church in Kenya has good reason to demand that the Ministry of Health continue to investigate how the tetanus vaccine samples became contaminated with significant amounts of βHCG.


Whether or not the contamination was deliberate or accidental, the result would be the effective sterilization of significant numbers of Kenyan women without their consent. If the contamination was accidental, the WHO and UNICEF need, at a minimum, to cancel their contracts with their current vaccine suppliers. If the contamination was deliberate, charges should be filed at the International Criminal Court. Such a mass sterilization campaign would arguably constitute a “crime against humanity” under international law.

We will continue to monitor this situation as it develops.


The pro-life Population Research Institute is dedicated to ending human rights abuses committed in the name of "family planning," and to ending counter-productive social and economic paradigms premised on the myth of "overpopulation." Find us at pop.org.


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