Watch the new documentary clicking following link:
This is documentary about how not just random sources but also some government officials, including from Estonia have cheated global audience with fake news, cultivating fear pandemic during corona era, how Estonian government cheated European Human Rights Court to cover up hospital murder and how in 2020 Estonian government itelf to help WHO to create global system to check for vaccination data about people travelling.
In mid April 2020 BBC spread completely fake claim from Estonian health officials who claimed that by the end of April 2020 around 1000 Covid-19 patients are in hospital on Estonian island Saaremaa, but in reality there were less than 60 Covid-19 patients. Spreading false claims in health care has become tradition for Estonian government that in 2014-2018 cheated European Human Rights Court with fake brain death paper to avoid responsibility for article 2 Right to Life, article 3 Prohibition of torture and article 8 Right to privacy violations. After hospital murder in Tallinn 2009 Estonian government officials compiled a fake one page brain death paper and then cheated the EHRC with this. They also cheated court about the illegal secret drugging of victim without informed consent - no consent had been ever written. Violations like that are common in Estonian health care since Soviet years when informed consent was not requested. Covering up medical mistakes and hunting for organs are organized same way - with secret administration of hazardous drugs, including Haloperidol that Washington Post has labelled Soviet era torture drug used to silence political prisoners. The documentary shows how up to most highest level officials in Estonia have decided to cheat for the sake of good image of country and with the price causing more harm as the doctors and nurses involved have been left to work on. In 2018 that lead to new horrible crime when doctors cheated parents of 2 year old boy hunting for his organs.
The documentary is made by journalist Anneli Reigas, who has been journalist for over 30 years, has worked for various news agencies, including for Finnish news agency STT and this century for a decade for global news agency Agence France-Presse.
Since late 2009 she has investigated crimes and violations in post-Soviet Estonian health care and corruption of authorities.