Over half a billion pounds of UK Covid-19 testing contracts awarded to multinational accused of supplying goods to China that assist ‘genomic surveillance’. THREAD:
US-based life science company Thermo Fisher Scientific owns several subsidiaries which have won 20 UK Coronavirus-related contracts since March 2020, totalling some £550 million.
These include a £331 million award to Life Technologies for Covid-19 testing equipment, the biggest Coronavirus contract we have found awarded to a single firm to date.
Further contracts were also issued to Thermo Fisher-owned Thermo Fisher Diagnostics Ltd; FEI UK Ltd; Qiagen Limited; and Fisher Scientific UK.
£553 million to a global consortium of companies with revenues of $25bn+, but how much due diligence went into this? ThermoFisher is linked to equipment sales that in the past possibly helped the Chinese state conduct ‘genomic surveillance’ on minorities
Human Rights Watch and New York Times reported Chinese state officials forcing persecuted minorities like the Uighurs to get biometric tests, potentially using Thermo Fisher equipment to take DNA data to create biobanks for their security services.
Thermo Fisher says it stopped selling equipment in Xinjiang province, where the Chinese government has been accused of keeping a million ethnic minority Uighurs in detention camps, in early 2019 after it came to realise what might be done with its tests.
But Thermo Fisher continues to trade in China. Meanwhile the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, a govt think tank, says China’s ‘genetic surveillance’ programme is now used throughout the country.
ASPI says numerous biotechnology companies, including TFS, continue to work with Chinese police who are building ‘the world’s largest police-run DNA database’ and comments that they could find themselves complicit in any human rights abuses stemming from the use of the database’
Thermo Fisher’s contracts weren’t won illegally, and there is no indication of wrongdoing, but should the government be awarding large contracts for UK Covid-19 testing to companies with lingering questions about provision of equipment which could be used in human rights abuses?
Owing to government opacity over Covid testing data privacy, there are questions about whether data obtained via PCR testing awarded to any company could be used for other forms of monitoring or data commodification.
We contacted Thermo Fisher for a reply to our concerns, but no answer was given.
Did this concern you? Are you willing to help @allthecitizens reveal more concerning Covid-19 contracts lacking in due diligence and oversight? If so, please see the thread below to find out how you can help contribute and hold those in power to account:
BREAKING: Almost two thirds of known VIP Covid-19 contracts awarded through a VIP fast-track service came via the offices of Tory ministers. THREAD.
As @GoodLawProject has revealed, a special VIP procurement channel was set up for Covid 19 contracts. @allthecitizens have explored the dedicated Cabinet Office email address to which VIP and invited companies could pitch for contracts.
The existence of this email was “publicised across the PPE procurement programme and to relevant private offices across government and Parliament”.
Have you heard of the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church (PBCC)? The Brethren is an evangelical Christian group that seems to have links to 21 UK companies that have won at least 49 Covid-related contracts since March, worth as much as £1.1 billion. THREAD.
We have no evidence that the companies involved do not have appropriate manufacturing expertise, but in light of the revelations about a VIP track to Covid contracts, should we be concerned about the high number of contracts awarded to companies with links to a religious group?
In October, @allthecitizens reported on contracts relating to the Conservative-linked religious group. We said then the total amount accrued by the network and its associated companies sat at over £951 million.
Billions in public funds have awarded in PPE contracts since the start of the pandemic, often to woefully unfit or politically adjacent entities, and without any official oversight.
Below we take a look back at 20 of the most shocking revelations uncovered since March:
1. Ayanda Capital - £252.5 million:
Eye-watering amount of money spent on 50 million FFP2 face masks bought from a "family office" investment firm based in a tax haven. None were usable.
Are major PPE contracts issued under emergency Covid regulations going to tax-avoiding companies, such as those listed in the Panama Papers?
We’ve found one contract issued under the emergency regulations going to Thermoplastics Ltd. It was awarded a £23.3 million contract for the supply of face shields on 30th April. Nothing wrong there.
Thermoplastics Ltd have been operating since 1996, specialising in injection moulded plastic products such as toys, fittings, and more recently face visors.
But the address listed for the company on the contract is: A16A Industrial Estate, Marsa, MT MALTA, MRS-3000, Malta.
The Citizens, Leigh Day and a cross party group of parliamentarians are holding our government to account. They have filed legal proceedings over the government's refusal to protect our democracy from Russian interference.
"The parliamentarians argue that the government’s inaction breaches its obligation under article three, protocol one of the European convention on human rights. This requires genuinely free elections to take place." @lukeharding1968 theguardian.com/politics/2020/…