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Australia fines Church for selling bleach as ‘miracle’ coronavirus cure

MMS Australia is a chapter of the US-based Genesis II Church of Health and Healing, which is subject to a US Justice Department injunction preventing it from selling or distributing its own version of MMS containing the bleach product chlorine dioxide.

Australia fines Church for selling bleach as ‘miracle’ coronavirus cure

In this picture released by Adhoc news agency a crew member of the Greg Mortimer cruise liner acknowledges to bystanders as he arrives at a hotel in Montevideo on May 12, 2020. - More than 60 crew members from the coronavirus-hit cruise ship Greg Mortimer -- among them dozens ill with COVID-19 -- were allowed on Tuesday to disembark in Uruguay to quarantine in two hotels. (Photo by Daniel Rodriguez / adhoc / AFP)

A church in Australia has been fined for unlawfully advertising a purported “miracle” coronavirus cure that contains a bleach product, the Therapeutic Goods Administration said Wednesday.

The medical regulator said MMS Australia had received 12 fines totalling Aus$151,200 (US$98,000) for promoting its “Miracle Mineral Solution” (MMS), which the TGA said contained a high concentration of sodium chlorite — a chemical used as a textile bleaching agent and disinfectant.

MMS Australia is a chapter of the US-based Genesis II Church of Health and Healing, which is subject to a US Justice Department injunction preventing it from selling or distributing its own version of MMS containing the bleach product chlorine dioxide.

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A website purportedly linked to the Genesis II Church has listed testimonials claiming — without evidence — that MMS can cure everything from Alzheimer’s to malaria.

Australia’s TGA said it had fined the church because it was “concerned about the harmful effects that can be caused by the ingestion of MMS”.

“There is no clinical, scientifically-accepted evidence showing that MMS can cure or alleviate any disease,” the regulator said.

“The use of MMS presents serious health risks, and can result in nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and severe dehydration, which in some cases can result in hospitalisation.”

MMS Australia is still advertising the products on its website, but said it had removed some text from the descriptions “to stay compliant with touted advertising laws and regulations”.

It added that “media lies that our site promotes the drinking of dangerous industrial bleach” had led to “ignorant and reprehensible, harrasment (sic) and attacks on our Church”.

The church claims on the site that, contrary to TGA’s findings, it does “not list or sell any therapeutic goods, as defined by legislation, and any apparent mention or reference to same is inadvertant (sic) and coincidental”.

It is not the first time MMS Australia has been in the spotlight for selling its purported “miracle” cure.

Four Australians were hospitalised after drinking the solution in 2014, prompting the TGA to issue a public safety warning.

The fine comes weeks after US President Donald Trump was severely criticised for suggesting COVID-19 patients could be treated with disinfectant.

The president later tried to walk back his comments, saying he was speaking “sarcastically”.

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