Madam Speaker, I am not really sure what this war is all about here. I have not ridiculed anybody. I have just stated facts. I was asked a question about a vaccine called Tamiflu, which does not exist. Where does ridiculing come in? I am not ridiculing anybody.
But on the issue of immunisation, Madam Speaker, the decision whether a drug is safe to immunise people with, or to give to people, is not made in Parliament. All around the world, it is done by scientists. It is never made in Parliament by me, but by scientists. [Laughter.] [Applause.] All the vaccines that are available now have been passed, even by the World Health Organisation. That is the body of scientists and authorities from around the world, authorities in medical matters, even higher than this Parliament. If they decide that this vaccine can be used, we actually use it.
So, I am not sure whether we should debate it here in this Parliament. We do not have that knowledge. I do not know where you will have got it from, because I have never seen you going to any university of medicine to study these things. [Laughter.] So, why don't you leave it to scientists? [Applause.] Please, allow the scientists to deal with this matter and let us stop politicising these issues!