Health Ministry warns against fake Covid-19 vaccines Chia sẻ | FaceBookTwitter Email Copy Link Copy link bài viết thành công
12/03/2021 12:00 GMT+7
Many domestic and foreign organizations and businesses have contacted the Ministry of Health to suggest providing vaccines against Covid-19.
However, the manufacturers of vaccines offered for sale on the market have not authorized these organizations to sell their vaccines.
Photo: AstraZeneca vaccine.
The Ministry of Health said on March 10 that the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol), and the Chinese and South African Police had recently arrested many people involved in the sale of fake Covid-19 vaccines. Interpol has also received more reports of counterfeit vaccine distribution and fraudulent activity targeting health authorities.
A screenshot of Shabazz Suleman speaking to Sky News in 2017 Three years later in the autumn of 2017, Suleman, whilst speaking to Sky News, claimed that ‘four to five months into ISIS’ he ‘wanted to leave’ as the group ‘changed dramatically.’ In a 20-minute interview, he revealed that he had relocated to Raqqa in Syria in March 2017 which at the time was the capital of Islamic State, where he said he ‘rode his bike and played GTA (Grand Theft Auto) on the PlayStation 4’.
The interview with Sky News from October 30, 2017 As of February 2019, it was reported that he had been freed from detention in the Middle Eastern country, but his current whereabouts is not known.
New ICT infrastructure targets national security, economic growth guardian.ng - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from guardian.ng Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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The International Criminal Police Organization, commonly known as INTERPOL has issued a Purple Notice to its 194 member countries outlining a specific modus operandi of fraudsters on dating applications.
The threat involves taking advantage of people’s vulnerabilities as they look for potential matches, and luring them into a sophisticated fraud scheme.
In the initial stages, an artificial romance is established via a dating app. Once communication becomes regular and a certain level of trust is established, criminals share investment tips with their victims and encourage them to join a scheme.
Victims download a trading app and open an account, buy various financial products and work their way up a so-called investment chain, all under the watchful eye of their new “friend”. They are made to believe they can reach Gold or VIP status.
Last modified on Mon 29 Mar 2021 07.00 EDT
In the late morning, on the day she planned to die, in April 2016, Avril Henry went to get the poison from the downstairs bathroom. She walked past the padded rocking chair where she sometimes sat for hours with her feet tilted above her head to ease the swelling in her ankles. She steadied herself against the countertop before reaching up to the top shelf and feeling around for the glass bottles that she had hidden there, behind the toilet cleaner and the baby powder.
“I got it imported illegally,” Avril had said of the drug supply. “It’s quite easy to do, but very risky.” She was at her home in Brampford Speke, a small village in south-west England with 300 residents, a pub called the Lazy Toad, a church, St Peter’s, and a parish council on which Avril had served several terms, earning a reputation as brilliant and steadfast, if sometimes needlessly adversarial.