A New Jersey pastor has been doling out a “miracle cure” for various diseases to thousands of people in Uganda — but the holy elixir is just industrial bleach, according to a report.

Robert Baldwin, the founder of the Global Healing ministry, pushed the “healing water” in Uganda, claiming it could cure everything from cancer and HIV/AIDS to diabetes and malaria, according to The Guardian report.

The concoction, called Miracle Mineral Solution, or MMS, is in fact, chlorine dioxide — an industrial bleach that can cause vomiting and dehydration, when heavily consumed, The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has warned.YouTube recently cracked down on videos promoting it.

Baldwin, 52, has reportedly been importing bulk shipments of the components of MMS into Uganda from China. Up to 50,000 people in Uganda — including infants as young as 14-months-old — have been fed the toxic fluid, according to The Guardian.

In a phone call obtained by The Guardian, Baldwin said he pawns the liquid as “healing water” and not MMS to “protect myself” and that he does so in Uganda because it is a poor country with fewer regulations.

“Facebook has algorithms that can recognize ‘MMS,'” he reportedly said. “America and Europe have much stricter laws so you are not as free to treat people because it is so controlled by the FDA. That’s why I work in developing countries.”

When reached by The Guardian, Baldwin said: “We use natural healing therapies to help people – that’s something Christians do.”

Then he said: “I don’t think it’s a good idea to be talking to the media right now.”

Following the report, which was published over the weekend, Baldwin — — who is trained as a nurse but has no other medical expertise — shut down his website and social media accounts, NJ.com reported.