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Amanda
24th April 2020, 06:12 AM
'They’re preparing people for microchip implants': Tennis legend Marat Safin shares coronavirus conspiracy theory

https://www.rt.com/sport/485744-marat-safin-coronavirus-conspiracy/

Russian tennis legend Marat Safin has suggested the coronavirus pandemic could be a pretext for the mass implanting of microchips into humans, as the former world number one gave an unexpected take on the crisis.

“I think they are preparing people for 'chipization' [chip implants]," Safin, 40, said in an Instagram chat with Russian outlet Sports.ru (https://www.sports.ru/tennis/1084884979.html).

“Back in 2015, Bill Gates said we’ll have a pandemic, that the next enemy is a virus, not a nuclear war.

“They did a simulation at the Davos [economic] forum of what it would be like. I don’t think Bill Gates is a predictor, he just knew.

“I think with this virus the situation isn’t like what we’re being told, but people believe it all, the horror stories on TV.

“Some people believe civilization will end, I don’t believe that. We’ll just be going around with chips soon," Safin added, continuing his unorthodox take on the current crisis.

In a further twist, the two-time Grand Slam winner even suggested there were shady forces at work that may be behind recent events.

“They’ve put the whole world at home, so everything works," said Safin.

“I think there are guys even bigger than world leaders who are the real masters of money, the masters of the world, they can turn things around easily.

[I]“Call it a shadow government, call it whatever you like. I think we don't even know they exist.

“The Rothschilds and the Rockefellers are well-known names, but someone else is behind them.”

Safin is not the only sporting conspiracy theorist to have emerged during the Covid-19 pandemic, which has led to almost 2 million infections and around 120,000 deaths.
In a recent video, British former world boxing champion Amir Khan aired idea that the installation of 5G networks could be the real reason behind the Covid-19 outbreak.

Acts of sabotage against 5G masts have even been reported (https://www.rt.com/news/485561-russia-coronavirus-daily-record/) in countries such as the UK and the Netherlands. UK government officials (https://www.rt.com/uk/484980-5g-fake-news-uk-government/) have branded the theories “dangerous nonsense” and “the worst kind of fake news.”
Scientists have repeatedly concluded that the high-speed communications system does not pose a threat to humans.

Amanda
24th April 2020, 06:14 AM
'It's man-made to test 5G': Boxer Khan spreads coronavirus conspiracy claims, suggests pandemic could be 'population control' plot

https://www.rt.com/sport/484967-coronavirus-5g-amir-khan/

Former world champion boxer Amir Khan has suggested that coronavirus did not originate in China and that the Covid-19 pandemic could be part of a plot to test new 5G communication networks and “get rid of a lot of us.”
In a confusing series of clips, the British star repeated a baseless conspiracy theory linking coronavirus to the 5G broadband network, which has recently been rolled out in several countries across the world.

Despite expert scientific studies repeatedly concluding that the high-speed communications system does not pose a threat to humans, Khan said he had “been watching a lot of these videos and stuff” and believed the technology “obviously” poisons human cells and blood, adding that it would “make things bad.”

“I don’t think it’s coming from China,” a drowsy-looking Khan said in a story on Instagram, where he has more than 1.3 million followers. “That’s a lie, really. People are saying that they were eating bats and snakes and the poison mixed. What b*llshit is that? Do you believe that? I don’t.

AMIR KHAN COVID-19 CONSPIRACY TALKS ABOUT 5G

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Btz-_jf61Mg&feature=emb_title


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Btz-_jf61Mg&feature=emb_title  

“Coronavirus this, coronavirus that – you’re probably getting bored of it, as I am. Do you not think it’s anything to do with that 5G in these towers that are going up?

“It’s a manmade thing. It’s been put there for a reason – while they test 5G. It might be for population control – get rid of a lot of us, especially when they say that it harms old people. Look at these towers at nighttime that have been put up, then telling people not to go out.”

Now he fears that “very bad” radiation, supposedly emitted by new masts, is causing the crisis – echoing the kind of concerns that may have led to a 20-meter telephone mast being burned in Birmingham this week in what is thought to have been an arson attack by anti-5G protestors.

In another video that emerged this week and has been watched by millions of people, a pair of employees carrying out cabling work on a street can be seen looking baffled as a woman accuses them of installing 5G as part of a plot to kill people – even though the broadband company they were working for does not use 5G.

Technology companies and analysts have said that networks including 5G are vital for communicating during a crisis that has isolated people worldwide.

“I bet they’re going to put one of those towers outside my house,” predicted Khan. “Who is behind all this? I hope it doesn’t start a war or anything.”

Khan seemed to support the widely-accepted diagnosis of the virus when the UK initially entered lockdown, telling fans to wash their hands to avoid spreading germs and holding up the hand sanitizer he was using in a Twitter video (https://twitter.com/amirkingkhan/status/1241808968407830530) last month.

He also publicly offered the National Health Service (NHS) a complex he had built to host weddings and retail outlets in his hometown of Bolton, saying: “We are looking down the barrel of bed shortages and people not getting vital treatment. NHS Bolton will bear this in mind. The offer is there. Please keep safe everyone.”

Khan warned that his latest videos could lead to people saying “that Amir Khan has lost his head”. “They’ll probably try to section me off, saying ‘this guy has taken too many punches to the head,’” he added, having noted “a pattern” to historic network roll-outs.

“Every time 3G, 4G, 5G happens, there’s always a pattern. Back in 2003, when 3G was released to the world, [there was a] SARS outbreak. Then in 2009, when 4G was introduced, everyone seemed to have this big outbreak of swine flu. 2020, guys – 5G, coronavirus breakout.”

SARS was identified in China four years before 3G was introduced in 2006, while global installation of 4G was roughly contemporaneous to the start of swine flu in Mexico, arriving the previous year and becoming increasingly widespread after the outbreak ended in 2010.

Khan has held a high profile in the UK for much of his 15-year professional career, raising money for a variety of causes through the charitable foundation he launched in 2011 to support disadvantaged young people and emergencies.

The 33-year-old has not fought since a fourth-round win over Billy Dib in Saudi Arabia last July and has a new baby with wife Faryal, but has claimed he was targeting an April fight before entering lockdown and has named former sparring partner Manny Pacquiao and British rival Kell Brook as possible future opponents.