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[–] 17415260? 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI)

As of January 1, 2010, the Clinton HIV/AIDS Initiative, an initiative of the Clinton Foundation, became a separate nonprofit organization called the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI).[11][30] Organizations such as the Clinton Foundation continue to supply anti-malarial drugs to Africa and other affected areas; according to director Inder Singh, in 2011 more than 12 million individuals will be supplied with subsidized anti-malarial drugs.[citation needed]

In May 2007, CHAI and UNITAID announced agreements that help middle-income and low-income countries save money on second-line drugs. The partnership also reduced the price of a once-daily first-line treatment to less than $1 per day.[31]

CHAI was spun off into a separate organization in 2010; Ira Magaziner became its CEO (he had been a key figure in the Clinton health care plan of 1993).[11] Chelsea Clinton joined its board in 2011, as did Tachi Yamada, former President of the Global Health Program at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.[11]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinton_Foundation#Clinton_Health_Access_Initiative_(CHAI)

https://archive.fo/VHU1r

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[–] 17415360? 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago  (edited ago)

Clinton Foundation Illegally Brokering Money & Pharmaceuticals? Connection with CHAI?

According to whistleblowers, there are multiple evidence of alleged crimes by Hillary’s Clinton Foundation

Mr. Jordan asks, “YOU SAID IN YOUR OPENING STATEMENT YOU USED THE TERM [CLINTON FOUNDATION ACTING AS] AGENT OF A FOREIGN GOVERNMENT. GIVE ME AN EXAMPLE OF THAT. “

Lawrence W. Doyle replies, “SO REALLY, IF YOU WANT TO REDUCE THIS TO LAYMEN'S TERMS, [THE CLINTON FOUNDATION] WERE BROKERING MONEY AND BROKERING PHARMACEUTICALS. THAT'S A TERM ON WALL STREET WE USE, BROKERING, JOHN USES THE TERM AGENT, [THE CLINTON FOUNDATION] WERE AN AGENT OF MONEY THROUGH THESE DONORS, THEY WOULD TAKE A, FOR LACK OF A BETTER TERM, A VIG, IN TERM OF THEIR FEES, BROKER THE MONEY, AND THEN [THE CLINTON FOUNDATION] NEGOCIATED THOSE RELATIONSHIPS WITH PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES, BY THE SAME TOKEN [THE CLINTON FOUNDATION] WERE BROKERING THE PHARMACEUTICALS AND AGAIN TAKING THE [FEES/]VIG.”

Sources:

• Video C-SPAN at https://www.c-span.org/video/?c4767663/clinton-foundation-brokering-money-pharmaceuticals

• Video YOUTUBE at https://youtu.be/qUYYxm0UF9A?t=9716

Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI)

As of January 1, 2010, the Clinton HIV/AIDS Initiative, an initiative of the Clinton Foundation, became a separate nonprofit organization called the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI).[11][30] Organizations such as the Clinton Foundation continue to supply anti-malarial drugs to Africa and other affected areas; according to director Inder Singh, in 2011 more than 12 million individuals will be supplied with subsidized anti-malarial drugs.[citation needed]

In May 2007, CHAI and UNITAID announced agreements that help middle-income and low-income countries save money on second-line drugs. The partnership also reduced the price of a once-daily first-line treatment to less than $1 per day.[31]

CHAI was spun off into a separate organization in 2010; Ira Magaziner became its CEO (he had been a key figure in the Clinton health care plan of 1993).[11] Chelsea Clinton joined its board in 2011, as did Tachi Yamada, former President of the Global Health Program at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.[11]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinton_Foundation#Clinton_Health_Access_Initiative_(CHAI)

https://archive.fo/VHU1r

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[–] 17415672? 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago  (edited ago)

Ira C. Magaziner, Chief Executive Officer at CHAI (Clinton Health Access Initiative)

Last month, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth ruled that White House aide Ira Magaziner–the architect of President Clinton’s 1993 health-care proposal–and White House lawyers had “deceived” his court in a 1993 affidavit. Officials had “run amok” in their response to a suit filed against the government, said Lamberth, and he ordered the government to cover the $285,864 legal bill incurred by the plaintiffs.

The “deception” that Lamberth complained about was contained in one sentence of a 13-page affidavit filed by Magaziner in response to the suit. Did Magaziner deceive the court, as Judge Lamberth insists he did?


Lamberth still believes that Magaziner deliberately misled the court and that government lawyers acted in “bad faith,”

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/1998/01/ira-magaziner.html

https://clintonhealthaccess.org/leadership/