Irish Daily Mail

ELLE’S PRAISE FOR HER ANTI-VACCINE LOVER

Disgraced Wakefield’s celebrity girlfriend says crisis is ‘divine’ time to share his crackpot claims

- By Brian Deer and Glen Keogh Brian Deer’s new book is The Doctor Who Fooled the World: Andrew Wakefield’s War on Vaccines.

ELLE Macpherson has dubbed the pandemic a ‘divine time’ to promote the campaign against vaccinatio­ns – backing her disgraced former doctor boyfriend.

The Australian model was speaking last month with Andrew Wakefield, whose discredite­d research linking the MMR jab and autism made him a pariah.

In video footage obtained by the Mail, she is introduced by Wakefield as ‘Elle Macpherson, my girlfriend’ ahead of a US screening of his most recent instalment of anti-vaccinatio­n propaganda.

Talking to him before an audience in North Carolina, she says: ‘You made this film during Covid, and it’s interestin­g because it’s such beautiful, sacred timing when you watch the film, because it’s so pertinent and so relevant.’

She added: ‘And for it to come in this divine time where vaccinatio­n and mandatory vaccinatio­n is on everybody’s lips.’

This was the first time the model-turned-entreprene­ur has acknowledg­ed their relationsh­ip i n public and endorsed her partner’s activism.

Ms Macpherson, 56, said she was ‘honoured’ to be sharing the stage with Wakefield, 64, saying she first heard about ‘Andy’ in 1998 – the year his now-notorious sham research falsely claimed to have discovered evidence in 12 children that the MMR vaccine caused autism. Wakefield, originally from Berkshire, England, was struck off the medical register in 2010 after his research showing the supposed link between the MMR j abs and autism was exposed as an ‘elaborate fraud’.

His false claims led to a downturn in vaccinatio­n among children and renewed measles outbreaks. He moved to the US and reinvented himself as a filmmaker and campaigner, and in recent months has seized on paranoia owing to the coronaviru­s pandemic to spread conspiracy theories around vaccinatio­n.

Wakefield has dismissed the virus as what he calls ‘WuFlu’, after the city of Wuhan in China, where the pandemic began. At an online ‘Health Freedom Summit’ he said the death toll had been ‘greatly exaggerate­d’ and the effects of the pandemic were ‘based upon a fallacy’.

Dr Tony O’Sullivan, a retired consultant paediatric­ian, last night said the spread of anti-vaccinatio­n ‘lies’ during the pandemic would guarantee ‘ the deaths of millions more’. ‘The anti-vaccinatio­n movement has never been more dangerous and pernicious than at this time of the pandemic,’ he said. ‘It is based on ignorance and selfishnes­s.’

On Ms Macpherson’s appearance alongside Wakefield, he added: ‘I think people are entering dangerous waters when they have scant knowledge about vaccinatio­ns against science and dedicated scientists.’

Wakefield and Ms Macpherson were first linked in 2018 when pic

‘Time where it’s on everybody’s lips’ ‘Entering dangerous waters’

tures emerged of them sharing a kiss at a Miami street market, shortly after Wakefield split from his wife of 30 years, who had stood by him throughout the MMR scandal. At a screening of his partly-dramatised film claiming a 1986 US Act which introduced a no-fault compensati­on scheme for possible cases of vaccine damage was an evil conspiracy, he s uggested pop s t ar Justin Timberlake had backed the film when they met at a fundraiser in Los Angeles in May.

A spokesman for Ms Macpherson was contacted for comment.

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 ??  ?? Campaign: Ex-doctor Andrew Wakefield and Ms Macpherson
Campaign: Ex-doctor Andrew Wakefield and Ms Macpherson

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