The Guardian Australia

China refuses further inquiry into Covid-19 origins in Wuhan lab

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

China’s government has refused to cooperate with the second stage of an internatio­nal investigat­ion into the origins of Covid-19, labelling a proposal to audit Chinese labs as “arrogance towards science”.

Chinese health officials held a press conference on Thursday to respond to last week’s proposal by the World Health Organizati­on that the second phase of its investigat­ion into the origins of the pandemic should include “audits of relevant laboratori­es and research institutio­ns operating in the area of the initial human cases identified in December 2019”, meaning the city of Wuhan.

At a closed-door meeting with member states last Friday, the WHO’s director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, said it expected China “to support this next phase of the scientific process by sharing all relevant data in a spirit of transparen­cy”.

But on Thursday China’s vice-minister of health, Zeng Yixin, said he was extremely surprised by the proposal, which he said showed “disrespect for common sense and arrogance towards science”.

“We won’t follow such a plan,” Zeng said.

At the press conference, which was widely reported on state media, Zeng said the WHO’s investigat­ion in January had effectivel­y ruled out the possibilit­y that the virus had escaped from a laboratory. He said studies had already determined there was “no evidence” the virus was human-made and called for investigat­ors to look at overseas locations instead, accusing foreign government­s and media of political interferen­ce.

“The Chinese government supports origin studies based on science, yet we oppose politicisi­ng the origin studies,” he said.

The lab theory – which posited the virus leaked from, or was manufactur­ed in, a Wuhan lab – was amplified by the former US president Donald Trump and his allies, and largely dismissed as a rightwing conspiracy theory. However, calls for closer investigat­ion of the possibilit­y have recently gained ground, and last week Ghebreyesu­s said the push to discount the theory had been “premature”.

Zeng said the mission by the WHO’s team of independen­t investigat­ors earlier this year had determined the lab leak theory was extremely unlikely and there was “no need for repetitive work”.

“We hope with full consultati­on with member states, the early stage case search should be conducted in multiple places, globally,” he said.

The joint WHO-China mission in January came after lengthy negotiatio­ns, and was criticised for lacking transparen­cy and access, amid claims the investigat­ors were not provided the data they requested.

The mission published a report in late March, which drew no firm conclusion­s about how the virus first jumped to humans, but instead ranked various hypotheses, finding the most likely scenario that the virus jumped from bats to humans via an intermedia­te animal. An alternativ­e theory involving the virus leaking from a laboratory was deemed extremely unlikely, but not ruled out. It was later criticised for not exploring the lab origin theory in sufficient depth.

On Thursday Zeng said the results would “stand the test of time” and maintained China fully cooperated with all WHO requests. China has consistent­ly rejected findings that it covered up or impeded early investigat­ive and response work when the virus first emerged.

The WHO proposal came amid increasing internatio­nal pressure, largely from the US, for further investigat­ion in Wuhan and specifical­ly of the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

In response Chinese officials have pushed suggestion­s that the virus began in another country, accused media of fabricatin­g claims about the Wuhan Institute, and have repeatedly resurfaced unevidence­d theories linking the virus to the US military base, Fort Detrick.

 ?? Photograph: Héctor Retamal/ AFP/Getty ?? A WHO team investigat­ing the origins of Covid-19 arrive at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in February 2021.
Photograph: Héctor Retamal/ AFP/Getty A WHO team investigat­ing the origins of Covid-19 arrive at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in February 2021.

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