Edmonton Journal

China’s interest in viruses ‘suspicious’

- TOM BLACKWELL

In a table-top pandemic exercise at Johns Hopkins University last year, a pathogen based on the emerging Nipah virus was released by fictional extremists, killing 150 million people.

A less apocalypti­c scenario mapped out by a blue-ribbon U.S. panel envisioned Nipah being dispersed by terrorists and claiming over 6,000 American lives.

Scientists from Canada’s National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory (NML) have also said the highly lethal bug is a potential bioweapon.

But this March, that same lab shipped samples of the henipaviru­s family and of Ebola to China, which has long been suspected of running a secretive biological warfare (BW) program.

China strongly denies it makes germ weapons, and Canadian officials say the shipment was part of its efforts to support public-health research worldwide. Sharing of such samples internatio­nally is relatively standard practice.

But some experts are raising questions about the March transfer, which appears to be at the centre of a shadowy RCMP investigat­ion and dismissal of a top scientist at the Winnipeg-based NML.

“I would say this Canadian ‘contributi­on’ might likely be counterpro­ductive,” said Dany Shoham, a biological and chemical warfare expert at Israel’s Bar-ilan University. “I think the Chinese activities … are highly suspicious,

in terms of exploring (at least) those viruses as BW agents.”

James Giordano, a neurology professor at Georgetown University and senior fellow in biowarfare at the U.S. Special Operations Command, said it’s worrisome on a few fronts.

China’s growing investment in bioscience, looser ethics around gene-editing and other cutting-edge technology, and integratio­n between government and academia raise the spectre of such pathogens being weaponized, he said.

That could mean an offensive agent, or a modified germ let loose by proxies, for which only China has the treatment or vaccine, said Giordano, co-head of Georgetown’s Brain Science and Global Law and Policy Program.

“This is not warfare, per se,” he said. “But what it’s doing is leveraging the capability to act as global saviour, which then creates various levels of macro- and micro-economic and bio-power dependenci­es.”

Asked if the possibilit­y of the Canadian germs being diverted into a Chinese weapons program is connected to other upheaval at the microbiolo­gy lab, Public Health Agency of Canada spokeswoma­n Anna Maddison said this week the agency “continues to look into the administra­tive matter.”

The agency divulged last week that it sent samples of Ebola and henipaviru­s — which includes Nipah and the related Hendra — to China in March.

EXPERTS ASK WHY COUNTRY WAS SENT LETHAL SAMPLES FROM CANADA

(CHINA IS) COMMONLY CONSIDERED TO HAVE AN ACTIVE BIOLOGICAL WARFARE PROGRAM.

It was meant for virus research, part of the agency’s mission to back internatio­nal public-health research, a spokesman said.

Last month, an acclaimed NML scientist — Xiangguo Qiu — was reportedly escorted out of the lab along with her husband, another biologist, and members of her research team. The agency said it was investigat­ing an “administra­tive issue,” and had referred a possible policy breach to the RCMP. Little more has been said about the affair.

China has been a signatory to the Biological Weapons Convention since 1984, and has repeatedly insisted it is abiding by the treaty that bans developing bioweapons.

But suspicions have persisted, with the U.S. State Department and other agencies stating publicly as recently as 2009 that they believe China has offensive biological agents.

Though no details have appeared in the open literature, China is “commonly considered to have an active biological warfare program,” says the Federation of American Scientists. An official with the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Chemical Defence charged last month that China is the world leader in toxin “threats.”

In a 2015 academic paper, Shoham — of Bar-ilan’s Begin-sadat Center for Strategic Studies — asserts that more than 40 Chinese facilities are involved in bioweapon production.

China’s Academy of Military Medical Sciences actually developed an Ebola drug — called JK-05 — but little has been divulged about it or the defence facility’s possession of the virus, prompting speculatio­n its Ebola cells are part of China’s biowarfare arsenal, Shoham told the National Post.

Ebola is classified as a “category A” bioterrori­sm agent by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, meaning it could be easily transmitte­d from person to person, would result in high death rates and “might cause panic.” The CDC lists Nipah as a category C substance, a deadly emerging pathogen that could be engineered for mass disseminat­ion.

Nipah, which was first seen in Malaysia in 1998, has caused a series of outbreaks across east and south Asia, with death rates mostly over 50 per cent, and as high as 100 per cent, according to World Health Organizati­on figures. It has no known treatment or vaccine.

The Johns Hopkins exercise — called Clade X — involved a version of Nipah modified to be more easily passed between people.

 ?? PUBLIC HEALTH AGENCY OF CANADA ?? Public Health Agency of Canada has referred a possible policy breach to the RCMP in relation to the National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory in Winnipeg.
PUBLIC HEALTH AGENCY OF CANADA Public Health Agency of Canada has referred a possible policy breach to the RCMP in relation to the National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory in Winnipeg.

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