Edmonton Journal

Suspension­s stun scientists

RESPECTED WINNIPEG EBOLA-DRUG SCIENTIST AT CENTRE OF RCMP INVESTIGAT­ION

- Tom Blackwell

Heinz Feldmann has known and worked with Xiangguo Qiu for years, and to this day says he has nothing but respect for his fellow microbiolo­gist. Indeed, Qiu won global accolades for her part in developing an experiment­al new drug for treating Ebola virus, most of the inquiry done at her high-security lab in Winnipeg.

So Feldmann says he was taken aback Monday to see a media report that the scientist and her entire research team, all from China, had been escorted out

of the federal government’s National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory (NML) last week and reported to the RCMP.

“I still hope that this is a big misunderst­anding,” said the former head of the lab’s special pathogens program, where Qiu worked. “She is a great researcher, she has been a great collaborat­or, she has been a great interacter in the field. I can’t say anything bad about her.”

Feldmann, now chief of the U.S. National Institutes of Health laboratory of virology in Montana, stressed that he had no personal knowledge of the reported events.

CBC-TV said that Qiu, as well as husband and nml scientist Keding Cheng and her students had been forcibly dispatched from the facility on July 5, a fact the national Post could not independen­tly confirm.

Eric morrissett­e, a spokesman for the Public Health agency of Canada, would not comment on whether she had been dismissed, citing privacy concerns.

But he said the agency is looking into an “administra­tive matter,” and advised the rcmp on may 24 of “possible policy breaches” at the lab.

the organizati­on is “taking steps to resolve it expeditiou­sly,” said morrissett­e in a statement. “there is no employee from the nml under arrest or confined to their home.” He also said the public is not at risk and that the work of the lab continues.

an rcmp spokesman confirmed to reuters news agency it had received a referral from the agency, but refused to comment on its investigat­ion. a university of manitoba spokesman told reuters that Qiu’s non-paying adjunct professors­hip had been suspended “pending an rcmp investigat­ion.”

with the government releasing so few details, it is unclear what might be behind the unusual episode.

But in the u.s., at least, security agencies have recently put a magnifying glass on researcher­s and students with ties to China, amid fears that Beijing is overseeing widespread theft of intellectu­al property and trade secrets.

a number scientists south of the border — and one now-retired professor at mcgill university — have been charged under a controvers­ial new “China Initiative” of the u.s. Justice department, which critics call a racially biased witch hunt.

the Ebola drug partly discovered by Qiu is being developed by a California company, and three potentiall­y competing medicines are also in the works.

But Feldmann said he doubts that treatments for an illness that afflicts relatively few people, with little pharmaceut­ical buying power, would be the subject of economic espionage.

“to make money off these rare diseases, there would be better things to do if you really wanted to make money,” he said.

regardless, there are few more high-profile figures still at the microbiolo­gy lab, whose level-four unit is one of a small number worldwide that work with the world’s most dangerous pathogens, including Ebola and other hemorrhagi­c fevers.

Qiu worked with Gary Kobinger, who succeeded Feldmann as head of special pathogens but has since left the lab himself, on so-called monoclonal antibody treatments for Ebola, their findings coming to the fore internatio­nally when the lethal virus swept through west africa in 2014 and 2015.

their discoverie­s make up two of three elements in the drug Zmapp, which has had promising results in limited trials and case-by-case in compassion­ate use, but has yet to receive approval.

according to a 2014 conference biography, Qiu obtained her master’s in immunology in 1990 at tianjin medical university.

she moved to Houston in 1996, then moved to Cancer Care manitoba the next year as a research associate.

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