Theyre preparing people for microchip implants Tennis legend Marat Safin shares coronavirus conspiracy theory

Russian tennis legend Marat Safin has suggested the coronavirus pandemic could be a pretext for the mass implanting of microchips into humans, as the former world number one gave his particular take on the crisis.

“I think they are preparing people for ‘chipization’ [chip implants],” Safin, 40, said in an Instagram chat with Russian outlet Sports.ru.

“Back in 2015, Bill Gates said we’ll have a pandemic, that the next enemy is a virus, not a nuclear war.

“They did a simulation at the Davos [economic] forum of what it would be like. I don’t think Bill Gates is a predictor, he just knew.

“I think with this virus the situation isn’t like what we’re being told, but people believe it all, the horror stories on TV.

“Some people believe civilization will end, I don’t believe that. We’ll just be going around with chips soon,” Safin added.

The two-time Grand Slam winner went on to suggest that there were shady forces at work around the globe.    

“They’ve put the whole world [in lockdown] at home, so everything works,” said Safin.

“I think there are guys even bigger than world leaders who are the real masters of money, the masters of the world, they can turn things around easily.

“Call it a shadow government, call it whatever you like. I think we don’t even know they exist.

“The Rothschilds and the Rockefellers are well-known names, but someone else is behind them.”

Safin is not the only sporting conspiracy theorist to have emerged during the Covid-19 pandemic, which has led to almost 2 million infections and around 120,000 deaths. 

In a recent video, British former world boxing champion Amir Khan recently aired the idea that the installation of 5G networks could be the real reason behind the Covid-19 outbreak.

Acts of sabotage against 5G masts have even been reported in countries such as the UK and the Netherlands.

UK government officials have branded the theories “dangerous nonsense” and “the worst kind of fake news.”

Scientists have repeatedly concluded that the high-speed communications system does not pose a threat to humans.