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TORONTO, Ontario (LifeSiteNews) – Children as young as 5 may be given COVID jabs, according to Ontario’s health minister.  

On Wednesday October 27, Ontario health minister Christine Elliot announced that Ontario schools will likely open COVID-19 vaccination clinics to inject 5- to 11-year-old children with the experimental shots once the vaccines are “approved” by Health Canada. Elliot also mentioned that an information campaign will be deployed as a necessary tool to encourage children to get jabbed, as recommended by the province’s table of experts. 

According to Elliot, the clinics will probably be open after school hours as “most parents would want to be with their child [while they are getting the jab].” 

“Some of [the clinics] may be on weekends or in the evenings because I think a lot of parents — if you’re speaking about vaccinating a five-year-old — most parents would want to be with their child,” stated the minister. 

The provincial health minister cited the government’s history of encouraging everyone eligible to take the COVID inoculations and indicated that jabbing children was a natural development. 

“We have, since the beginning, encouraged everyone who was able to receive the vaccine to do so, and we’re continuing that message with children aged 5 to 11 once the vaccine does become available, and is … approved by Health Canada,” Elliot said. 

“That doesn’t deviate from our message at all. We want everyone who can receive the vaccine to do so.”   

Despite “approval” from Health Canada and America’s Food and Drug Administration (FDA), all the currently available COVID-19 so-called vaccines are experimental, with clinical trials not set to be completed until 2023 

In addition to being experimental, the COVID-19 vaccines have been linked to thousands of deaths and millions of injuries worldwide, with young people being particularly susceptible to cardiac-related adverse effects. 

In a quietly released report by Public Health Ontario in September, 341 cases of the potentially fatal heart disorders myocarditis and pericarditis were reported as adverse reactions to the shots between December 2020 and August 2021, with 204 cases meeting the “case definition levels of diagnostic certainty” to qualify as vaccine-induced myocarditis and pericarditis. 

Out of the 204 confirmed cases, “79.9% occurred in males,” with the highest case count, 106, occurring in young people “aged 18-24 years.” 

Meanwhile, healthy children are not in danger of serious illness, let alone death, from COVID-19. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, children have a 0.00-0.003% mortality rate when they have contracted COVID-19, leading many doctors to take a strong stance against the experimental injection of children, particularly in light of the risks the shots pose to young people. 

In response to the use of terms such as “severe myocarditis” and “mild myocarditis,” Dr. Steven Pelech, a Canadian professor of medicine, stated, “Contrary to what a number of people have said, there is no such thing as ‘mild myocarditis.’” 

According to Pelech, the “chances of dying from COVID is about .003% for people under the age of 24 in Canada,” and that for those under 19, the chances of injury from the “vaccine is about four to five times higher than getting infected with SARS-CoV-2 itself.” 

“Why would you want to submit people who are unlikely to be negatively affected by the virus itself with vaccines that have now been proven, in scientific literature, to be associated with health risks?” the doctor asked in August.  

Despite recorded adverse events in young people, the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table, which has been advising the government during the pandemic, insist that the shots not only be approved but encouraged among young children.  

According to the Toronto Sun, the Science Advisory Table  “is suggesting four main strategies for increasing vaccine uptake in children and youth, including using schools as clinics, recommendations from health-care providers, reminders, and public health communication campaigns.” 

“Increasing COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and uptake in children and youth will help allow them to continue safely returning to pre-pandemic activities by reducing transmission, hospitalizations, and severe outcomes,” wrote the government’s advisors in a report released on October 26. 

“The communications should address misinformation and foster positive attitudes to vaccination,” they added. “The imagery shouldn’t be focused on needles, rather on the benefits, such as protecting grandparents, keeping schools open and participating safely in recreational activities.”  

Just a month prior to Elliot’s statements last week, and the Science Advisory Table’s  report, a 17-year-old Ontario boy died shortly after receiving the jab. 

Sean Hartman, 17, from Beeton, Ontario is said to have suffered from “multiple” health problems “immediately” after the jab, including myocarditis. He received the COVID jab in order to be able to play hockey in an arena where the shot is required for entry. He died on September 27 from a heart attack. 

Shortly after the boy’s death,  a small demonstration was held close to the hockey arena that mandated the jab. One man who participated held up a sign facing the road that read, “A broken heart from not being allowed to play hockey will heal. Myocarditis from the jab will kill (or be a long-long condition).” 

Pelech, who maintains his opposition to the mass vaccination of children, noted that when the heart cells die from myocarditis “they are not replaced in your body and are instead replaced by scar tissue, which is from fibroblasts.” 

“The remaining muscle cells have to get a little bigger in order to compensate. Every time you get an inflammatory response, you lose more of that contractility and have a greater chance of heart attack and other problems later in life.”