Click here to go directly to the exclusive interview with Heinrich Habig
Two years and three months imprisonment without parole – that was the sentence for Heinrich Habig, a doctor from Recklinghausen, at the end of September. His crime: He had issued vaccination certificates to people who did not want to be vaccinated but felt compelled by the state to be vaccinated by discriminating against the unvaccinated, without actually injecting them with the mRNA gene therapy commonly referred to as “vaccination.” He had previously been sentenced to two years and ten months in a partial verdict by a criminal division of the Bochum Regional Court presided over by Judge Petra Breywisch-Lepping(see here).
Habig spent 16 months in pre-trial detention. By Habig’s own estimation, he has helped people who were in personal or economic distress and who were under “existential pressure” regarding vaccination. The physician invokes emergency assistance. For him, the only choice was to “vaccinate” his patients against his better knowledge – or to issue them a vaccination certificate in order to relieve them of a perceived or actual distress. He had felt more committed to the Hippocratic Oath as well as the welfare of his patients than to the law.

After being released while still in the courtroom when the second sentence was announced, Habig is now speaking to the public for the first time about his time in prison and his motivations. Fellow inmates respected him; many of the “tough guys” couldn’t even understand why he was in prison, Habig said. According to the report, most of the judicial officials also behaved correctly. Some have even expressed sympathy. At times, however, there was also unbelievable harassment, as the doctor recounts in the interview. For example, when, while walking around the yard in the snow, almost alone in a wide open space, he was yelled at by a female guard, “Habig, mask on!”
There had been a rat infestation in the prison, the doctor said. In the case of a fellow inmate, for example, a rat had entered his cell through the toilet. In the interview, the physician describes in detail and vividly what he had to endure behind bars. How he got massively cold in the prisoner room at the court and was paraded for a long time even with ankle cuffs like a felon.
Habig describes how his grandchildren, with whom he had previously had very close contact, became frightened when they first visited him in prison that they would have to stay there. He tells what gave him the strength to survive all the sixteen months in jail: His love for his wife and his deep faith in God.
Watch the first part of my conversation with Habig here. The second part will follow in a few days.
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