The order of 500,000 smallpox vaccines placed by Canada just weeks before the monkeypox outbreak began, despite the disease being declared eradicated in 1972, has forced many people to doubt the mainstream narrative.
Weeks before the first cases were reported, Public Services and Procurement Canada issued a tender for 500,000 smallpox vaccine doses that can be used against monkeypox.
500,000 doses of Imvamune, a "third generation" smallpox vaccine, were ordered "on behalf of the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC)" on April 21, according to a report from Public Services and Procurement Canada, weeks before the first cases of monkeypox were reported to the World Health Organization on May 13.
“Although smallpox disease is currently considered to be eradicated, PHAC is procuring a stockpile of the vaccine to immunize Canadians against smallpox disease should a risk ever arise where smallpox is intentionally or unintentionally released,” the April 21 tender reads.
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