Dr. Luc Montagnier reveals how Covid-19 is a lab accident

 Who is Dr. Luc Montagnier?

He  is a French virologist and joint recipient with Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and Harald zur Hausen of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

- He currently works as a full-time professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China.

Professor Montagnier, a former member of the Institut Pasteur, was awarded the 2008 Nobel Prize in Medicine for the identification of the virus responsible for AIDS

He said " the SARS-CoV-2 virus is the result of an attempt to manufacture a vaccine against the AIDS virus, the presence of elements of HIV in the genome of the new virus, and even of elements of the “germ of malaria” are suspect. The characteristics of the new coronavirus could not have arisen naturally.

The new coronavirus is the result of a lab accident. The accident was said to have taken place in the Wuhan National Biosafety lab.

Read more: The reasons why second dose of COVID-19 vaccine has worse side effects

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Read more: The side effects of COVID-19 vaccines and messages from volunteers 

According to Nature.com, the Wuhan lab was designed and constructed with French assistance as part of a 2004 cooperative agreement on the prevention and control of emerging infectious diseases.

“The Wuhan city laboratory has specialized in these coronaviruses since the early 2000s,” he claimed. “They have expertise in this area.

These are very small elements that we find in other viruses of the same family, other coronaviruses in nature. These are pieces of the genome that actually look like lots of sequences in the genetic material of bacteria, viruses and plants. “If we take a word from a book and it looks like another word, can we say that one has copied from the other? This is absurd."

Read also : The reasons why you should worry about AstraZeneca vaccine

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Read more: Comparing vaccines: country of origin, safety, efficacy, and approval


No doubt Dr. Montagnier helped to denounce the dangerousness of vaccines and compulsory vaccination, believing that there was a risk “with good will at the start, of poisoning the entire population little by little.
Developing new vaccines takes time, and they must be rigorously tested and confirmed safe via clinical trials before they can be routinely used in humans. 

As you know vaccine is a type of treatment aimed at stimulating the body's immune system to fight against infectious pathogens, like bacteria and viruses.

Read more: What should you do before and after getting a COVID-19 vaccine

Most people infected will have a mild illness and recover completely in two weeks.


On average, it takes five to six days from the day you are infected with SARS-CoV-2 until you develop symptoms of COVID-19. This pre-symptomatic period also known as "incubation" can range from one to 14 days.
From there, those with mild disease tend to recover in about two weeks, while those with more severe cases can take three to six weeks to recover.

There is another scientist who has different opinion about the origin of coronavirus. Dr. Anthony R. Fehr, Assistant Professor of Infectious Disease at the University of Kansas. He was one of about a hundred people in the country studying the coronavirus full-time. You can read that here: Message from the one who predicted coronavirus pandemic

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