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https://rense.com/general96/xian-lockdown.php
By Yoichi Shimatsu
Exclusive To Rense.com
1-19-22
Named after the Hantan River that flows through Seoul, Korea,
Hantavirus was first developed as a biological weapon during the
pre-World War II occupation of China by that infamous Unit 731 of
the Japanese Imperial Army, based in Harbin, near the Amur River
(Heilongjiang, or Black Dragon River), as still disclosed by
infections among the Amur rat species. After the defeat of Japan in
WWII, Hantavirus subtypes were further weaponized in the postwar
era by 731 veterans recruited into the U.S. Army biological warfare
program at the Dugway Proving Ground, 85 miles southwest of Salt
Lake City. What a fine partnership it was, heralding a new bilateral
era of better bioweapons!
Disinfo from the Mouths of Charlatans
Haunted by Hantavirus
Inside the massive brick walls left by the Ming Dynasty, high and
mighty Xian has been impregnable to invasions and peasant
uprisings, in contrast to Nanjing or even Beijing. After deboarding
the Silk Road train and entering its sanctuary, without fear of
intimidation or hard stares, visitors may dine among the many Hui
Muslim lamb barbecue restaurants near the Bell Tower and then
stroll to the ancient Taoist and Buddhist scroll-and-painting district
with its Beilin antiquities museum. Up on its high ramparts, a visitor
notices the refreshing dry, crisp desert air of a healthy environment,
carrying none of the cloying humidity of the coastal cities, which
renders suspect the recent travel ban to Xian due to the outbreak of
the Delta variant of coronavirus and then by another infectious
agent dropped by tiny squeaky creatures scurrying inside the
kitchen walls. Obviously I still have doubts of whether the Xian
outbreak stemmed from natural causes.
Imposed on December 22, the travel ban into and out of Xian, has
recently been eased somewhat to allow for entry of food supplies
and so as not mar the glory of the Beijing Winter Olympics. There's
an air of mystery, however, in the recent tightening of health
checks in Beijing and other major cities, as if in dread of leakage of
an infectious agent out of Xian.