Representatives of Pfizer Inc. have confirmed at an Australian Senate hearing that Pfizer staff used their own batch of specially imported vaccines during the coronavirus pandemic, separate from the stocks used by the general public.
“We’ve read that your [employee] vaccine mandate was using your own batch of vaccine especially imported for Pfizer, which was not tested by the TGA,” said Senator Malcolm Roberts of the populist One Nation party, referring to the Therapeutic Goods Administration which regulates medicines in Australia.
“Is that correct?” he asked.
“Uh, Senator, so, Pfizer undertook to import a batch of vaccines especially for the employee vaccination program, and that was so that no vaccine would be taken from government stocks that was being delivered to clinics as needed,” one of the Pfizer representatives confirmed.
Asked if they fired anyone who “refused to take the injection,” the Pfizer representatives prevaricated, but eventually confirmed that “a small number of colleagues departed the company,” and further confirmed that they continue to enforce a vaccine mandate against employees in Australia to the present day.
They refused to discuss details of the indemnity they were granted by the Australian government, including whether or not it would be negated if they were found to have to have “committed a crime such as fraudulent treatment of trial data,” insisting all their indemnity agreements worldwide were confidential.
One of the Pfizer representatives did say that the pharma corporation “always abides by all of the laws and regulations of the markets in which it is operates,” but this is factually inaccurate, with the company having paid massive fines in the United States for illegally promoting drugs and causing false claims to be submitted to government health care programs, for example.