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New Review Linking Jab to Cancer Targeted

Shortly after publication, Oncotarget became inaccessible, with the journal attributing the outage to an ongoing cyberattack that has been reported to the FBI.

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DTNZ

A newly published global review examining reports of cancer diagnoses following Covid mRNA ‘vaccination’ has become the focus of controversy after the medical journal hosting it was taken offline by a cyberattack days after publication.

The paper, released on January 3 in the peer-reviewed journal Oncotarget, was authored by researchers from Tufts University and Brown University and analysed 69 studies and case reports from 27 countries between 2020 and 2025.

Across those reports, the authors identified 333 cases in which cancers were newly diagnosed or rapidly progressed (‘turbo cancers’) within weeks of vaccination.

The researchers concluded the worrying patterns highlight the need to further investigation into the safety of Covid jabs.

Shortly after publication, Oncotarget became inaccessible, with the journal attributing the outage to an ongoing cyberattack that has been reported to the FBI.

One author, Dr Wafik El-Deiry, said the disruption prevented access to newly published research and raised concerns about censorship and who was behind the attack.

“Censorship of the scientific press is keeping important published information about Covid infection, Covid vaccines and cancer signals from reaching the scientific community and beyond,” said El-Deiry.

This article was originally published by the Daily Telegraph New Zealand.

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