Original article (in Serbian) was published on 16/10/2025; Author: Milica Blagojević
Serbian portal Srbin Info reported that The International Tribunal of the Alliance of Indigenous Nations, allegedly recognized by Canada, has declared COVID vaccines to be biological and technological weapons in its “Declaration.” However, it turns out that this “tribunal” is neither a legitimate nor a recognized body, nor is its Declaration based on any relevant legal documents or reliable medical sources.
More than five years after the start of the pandemic, conspiracy theories and unverified claims about COVID vaccines continue to circulate persistently – first on social media, but also through online portals. In Serbia such a portal is Srbin Info.
During and after the pandemic, Raskrikavanje documented numerous unfounded and inaccurate claims about COVID vaccines published by said outlet. In the same style, they recently reported on an alleged International Tribunal that, as they put it, declared COVID vaccines to be “weapons of mass destruction.”
“For the first time in history, an internationally recognized legal body has officially declared COVID mRNA vaccines to be ‘biological and technological weapons of mass destruction,’ based on international law,” they wrote in the article.
But what exactly is this “internationally recognized body”?
The article refers to The Tribunal of the Alliance of Indigenous Nations (AIN).
Their website states that they have existed since December 2022. It says their mission is to serve as “a collective voice for the unification of all Indigenous people and tribes across the world.”
In October of 2025, they issued a Declaration proclaiming mRNA vaccines to be biological weapons.
What does the Declaration say?
The document itself relies on various legal terms in an attempt to appear legitimate. These include rulings of Canadian courts or the UN’s International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. However, these documents deal with the rights of Indigenous and other people and have nothing to do with medicine.
The main section of the Declaration, where it claims that COVID vaccines are biological weapons contains fewer than ten pages. It speaks of “the end of the human species,” “mass destruction,” and “degeneration” – language that is not familiar in science or legal documents, but in conspiracy theories.
They claim that these vaccines are “biological weapons” created by colonial powers to spread across humanity, with “original people as the priority group.”
“This Tribunal finds and hereby declares that the COVID-19 injections, mRNA injections, or mRNA nanoparticle injections are in fact biological and technological weapons of mass destruction,” the Declaration states at the beginning.
However, the document lacks references and evidence. The text has no scientific structure or methodology, but it contains many terms that are not understandable to the average reader, which is a common pseudoscientific tactic.
The document is based on retellings and resembles a collection of narratives about vaccines, rather than a Declaration intended to really prove that they are “weapons.”
It offers no biography of the mentioned experts, and even for one of them they noted that he is a professor of international law and not a medical expert. They refer to teams and groups of researchers without providing evidence that they actually exist and without referencing their work.
The self-proclaimed tribunal and Canada’s alleged “recognition”
Srbin Info portrays the document as credible by claiming that Canada has “officially recognized” the organization.
However, what the Alliance refers to can hardly be described as recognition.
In December of last year, the AIN received a letter from Gary Anandasangaree, then Minister of Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs, responding to a letter they had previously sent him.
The former minister thanked them for their dedication and activities concerning Indigenous people. However, at no point did he state that this letter constitutes official recognition of the organization, let alone that it does so on behalf of Canada.
Additionally, the AIN has not published the original letter they sent to him, so it is unclear in what context the minister’s response was written.

Photo: Letter from the ex-minister addressed to the AIN
That did not stop the organization from highlighting the following on its website:
“In a letter from the Ministry of Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs dated December 13, 2024, the UN member Nation Canada has officially recognized the Alliance of Indigenous Nations, along with its Treaty and its International Tribunal, presided over by judges from over the world.”
However, international tribunals that investigate groups or individuals who have committed international crimes are recognized by the United Nations – and the “Tribunal” of the Alliance of Indigenous Nations is not.