The first death in Britain from a Sars-like virus last week, and the news that an untreatable and deadly strain of tuberculosis (TB) has been discovered in South Africa, has highlighted one of the most dangerous aspects of mass Third World immigration: the real threat it poses to the health and standards of the civilised world.

The Sars patient was being treated as an outpatient at Queen Elizabeth hospital, Birmingham for an unrelated condition which made him more susceptible to respiratory infections, the Health Protection Agency was reported as saying.

The victim “is believed to have caught the virus from his father who had recently travelled to Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. The father remains severely ill in hospital in Manchester, where he was transferred for treatment on an ECMO machine, which oxygenates the blood when the lungs fail.”

An earlier, unrelated case was diagnosed in September 2012 in a patient who had flown to London for treatment after falling ill in Qatar. He remains seriously ill.

Meanwhile, the unpleasant news from South Africa is that the first cases of “’totally drug-resistant” tuberculosis have been found in South Africa, according to a new paper published in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Emerging Infectious Diseases journal.

The disease is particularly prevalent in South Africa, where high rates of HIV means the immune systems of many more people are susceptible to infections.

As far back as March 2010, the World Health Organisation warned that in some areas of the world, one in four people with tuberculosis were being struck down with the ‘disease that can no longer be treated with standard drugs regimens’.

After widespread vaccination in much of the developed world, the disease has been largely isolated in 22 so-called ‘high burden’ countries—including South Africa. These poorer regions account for around 80 per cent of global cases of TB.

According to Medical News today, TB is “a major cause of illness and death worldwide, especially in Africa and Asia. Each year the disease kills almost 2 million people. The disease is also prevalent among people with HIV/AIDS.”

Although the biological origin of TB is the Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacillus, TB is closely linked to overcrowding and malnutrition, making it one of the principal diseases of poverty—in other words, a Third World disease if ever there was one.

To understand just how bad things are in the Third World as regards treatment, only one example need be used: A report in the South African Times newspaper of February 4, 2013, revealed that the quarters for nurses at a major hospital in the Eastern Cape region were little more than a filthy slum.

If these are the conditions which the “nurses” keep for themselves, there is little hope for any decent treatment for “patients”—and thus the lack of effective treatment helps to spread the disease even further.

Why then, would institutions such as Britain’s National Health Service (NHS) actively recruit staff from the Third World instead of training up white British people?

The answer can only be summed up in two words: race treason.

The policy of mass Third World immigration is nothing less than the deliberate, planned, mass genocide of the European people.