The Documentation About "Codex Alimentarius"
What are the aims of the Codex Alimentarius Commission?
Constructed by the pharmaceutical industry, the Codex Alimentarius Commission
is a self-proclaimed expert organization that has allied with the World
Health Organization (WHO) and the World Food Organization (FAO). From
the beginning, this was done with the intention of passing regulations
and laws to protect the global pharmaceutical market.
Of the 30 committees using the title "Codex Alimentarius,"
those involved with food supplements and vitamins are of particular interest
to the pharmaceutical industry. The central committee is the "Codex
Committee on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Uses." A puppet
of the pharmaceutical industry, this committee has only been concerned
with one topic since the middle of the 1990's: how to prevent vitamins
and other food supplements from causing the collapse of the markets for
beta-blockers, calcium antagonists, cholesterol lowering products and
other widely superfluous pharmaceutical preparations.
By far, Germany is the biggest exporter of these dubious pharmaceutical
products and nowhere else in the world exists such a bond between the
pharmaceutical industry and politics. Therefore it is no surprise that
the Government of the German Federal Republic is in charge of this committee,
benefiting the pharmaceutical cartel.
The aims of Codex Alimentarius are clearly defined: Statements on the
curative effects of vitamins and other natural remedies will be banned
and made a punishable offense. In the future, the distinction between
a foodstuff and a medicine will be made by the pharmaceutical industry
itself and not by governments.
Using this new legislative edict, the pharmaceutical industry will extend
its own markets as it sees fit. At present, the pharmaceutical industry
has succeeded in classifying 500 milligrams of vitamin C in pill form
as a medication requiring a prescription in Germany. If the pharmaceutical
industry had its way, 100 mg or even 50 mg of vitamin C would be classified
as medication.
The pharmaceutical industry knows that most people have no understanding
of these restrictions and has disguised them with legal jargon.
The strategic aims of "Codex Alimentarius"
- The distribution of health information concerning vitamins, amino
acids, minerals and other natural products for the prevention and treatment
of diseases will be banned globally.
- The sale of vitamins and other natural products which exceed the
guidelines of this Codex commission (which are arbitrary and far too
low) will be prohibited globally.
- Countries that fail to apply these laws will be punished by international
economic sanctions.
To mask its actual intention of protecting the world market of superfluous
pharmaceutical preparations, those responsible for Codex have invented
exculpatory statements: Thus the next Codex Alimentarius conference will
occur at the "Federal Office for Health-related Consumer Protection"
in Berlin in November of 2002. In addition to the "consumer protection"
from alleged "harmful side effects" of vitamins, a need for
united international administration of the pharmaceutical industry was
indicated.
The fact that the pharmaceutical industry believes that this disguised
justification will be unacceptable is clearly evident since Codex plans
to punish all those who oppose its plans with economic sanctions by the
UN.
Our response: Talk to as many people as possible about these irresponsible
plans and let the members of the Codex commission and their delegates
know what you think.
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