
A judge has ordered Rachel Elnaugh to tear down her “safe haven” for anti-vaxxers after she participated in the second season of the BBC One competition that starred Deborah Meaden and Peter Jones.
The 58-year-old once tweeted that Chris Whitty ‘will hang’ for giving children the Covid-19 immunisation and referred to it as ‘child abuse’.
Additionally, she distributed flyers that said immunisations were “experimental gene therapies” that weren’t suitable for young children.
Elnaugh referred to the vaccination campaign as “brainwashing of the masses” in one YouTube video.
Elnaugh’s 70-acre “safe haven” plot in the Peak District, which he acquired through crowd-funding nearly £1,000,000 with a group called Phoenix Rose, has been ordered to close and return to its original state after it was discovered that the development, which includes a teepee and a car park, was constructed without obtaining the necessary permits.
In films posted online, she described the area as a “safe haven away from the threat humanity [is] facing” and described the vaccine effort as a “great reset.”
According to The Times, residents of the local village have claimed ‘shamanic rituals’ occur there, while Elnaugh herself described the national park as an ‘incredible vagina of land’.
The site “failed to respect or enhance the character of their surroundings and have a significant harmful effect on the character and appearance of the landscape,” according to an enforcement notice the magazine got.
Elnaugh refers to the area as “a natural, magical Temple” and a “Portal for Planetary Healing” on her website.
She adds in a video that “manifestation” was used to acquire the land.
Dragons’ Den is available to watch on BBCiPlayer.