Vancouver Sun

WUHAN LINK IN RCMP PROBE

Force still looking at scientists

- TOM BLACKWELL

Xiangguo Qiu was a star at the National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory, Canada’s premier disease-research facility. As the co-creator of a once-promising treatment for Ebola virus, her work earned kudos around the world.

That reputation made it all the more shocking when she and her biologist husband, Keding Cheng, were escorted from the lab last July as internal and RCMP investigat­ions got underway.

But a year later, those inquiries have yet to be completed, the two scientists appear still in limbo and the Public Health Agency of Canada, which employs them, has revealed another link between the affair and Wuhan, the Chinese city that several months later became the likely source of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A shipment of Ebola and henipaviru­s samples to China, previously disclosed by the agency and first reported by the National Post, was requested specifical­ly by the

Wuhan Institute of Virology, said Eric Morrissett­e, an agency spokesman. The institute runs the country’s lone BSL-4 disease lab, similar to the Winnipeg-based NML and the highest-security facility for handling pathogens.

Qiu helped train staff at the Wuhan lab, among several trips she took to her native China in recent years.

Yet the government and police have divulged little else about the situation, leaving a haze of mystery over it that has spawned groundless COVID-19 conspiracy theories — and frustrated even NML employees.

“They have told the staff nothing, other than a ridiculous order last summer that we’re not allowed to discuss it or speculate about what may be going on,” said one Public Health Agency employee, not authorized to speak on the record. “Many of us think it is such a huge story that they are trying to keep buried for some pretty serious reasons. We just don’t know what those are.”

Some respected former colleagues, however, call Qiu a stellar researcher and say they doubt she was guilty of any wrongdoing.

Reached at home Monday, Qiu said she had no comment on her predicamen­t.

The agency has said only that it was looking into an “administra­tive matter” and had referred “possible policy breaches” to the RCMP.

“The (internal) administra­tive review remains underway,” said Morrissett­e recently. “We cannot provide further details.”

As for the RCMP probe, “the matter is still under investigat­ion. No charges have been laid at this time,” said Sgt. Paul Manaigre, a spokesman for the force in Manitoba.

RCMP STILL PROBING CHINESE VIRUS RESEARCHER AT WINNIPEG LABORATORY

The matter appears to have something to do with that shipment to Wuhan in March 2019 of samples of Ebola and henipaviru­s — another highly virulent family of pathogens. Neither is related to COVID-19.

“In response to a request from the (Wuhan) institute for viral samples of Ebola and Henipah viruses, the Public Health Agency of Canada sent samples for the purpose of scientific research in 2019,” Morrissett­e said. “The National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory (NML) shares samples with other public health laboratori­es — as they do with the NML — to contribute to the advancemen­t of science.”

Qiu’s earlier fame was the result of her work with Gary Kobinger, now a professor at Laval University, to develop “monoclonal antibodies” for treating Ebola, which eventually formed part of the drug Z-Mapp. Despite early promise, the results from a clinical trial published in 2019 raised doubts about its efficacy.

But the groundbrea­king research won them the Governor General’s Award for Innovation and other accolades.

Then last July came the sudden, largely unexplaine­d removal of Qiu and Cheng.

A native of China with a medical degree from Hebei University and a masters in immunology from Tianjin University, Qiu settled in Canada in 1996, eventually ending up at the federal microbiolo­gy lab.

In the three years before her removal, she had made eight trips to China, including two to Wuhan, according to agency records obtained through access to informatio­n legislatio­n, and first reported by the CBC.

Many of the visits were to give talks on the high-profile Ebola work, which put the Public Health Agency “at the forefront of the field,” said the travel document.

She travelled to Wuhan in September 2017, the records indicating that she had been invited to train scientists and technician­s at the BSL-4 lab “for 7-14 days per trip, twice a year for two years.”

The training visits were paid for by a third party, whose identity was redacted from the agency document. Qiu returned to Wuhan the next month to speak at an internatio­nal virology conference, the documents show.

The American government has raised the possibilit­y that the virus causing COVID-19 escaped accidental­ly from the Wuhan lab, and U.S. diplomats said in a 2018 cable — according to a Washington Post report — that they had concerns about its safety.

Meanwhile, the visits to Wuhan and the shipment of Ebola and henipaviru­s samples have given rise to conspiracy theories involving Qiu and the pandemic. But there is no evidence whatsoever tying her or the Winnipeg lab to COVID-19, which American intelligen­ce and science indicates is caused by a naturally occurring virus that likely originated in bats.

U.S. authoritie­s have recently looked closely at ties between scientists from China and their birth country. Former colleagues of Qiu’s in Winnipeg, however, have said it’s hard to imagine she would be part of anything like that, and note that internatio­nal collaborat­ion is an integral part of science.

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 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Winnipeg’s National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory is at the centre of an investigat­ion involving a top microbiolo­gist who was escorted from the lab as the RCMP probe began in July.
POSTMEDIA NEWS Winnipeg’s National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory is at the centre of an investigat­ion involving a top microbiolo­gist who was escorted from the lab as the RCMP probe began in July.

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