China Daily (Hong Kong)

Vice-FM: Don’t use probe to stigmatize China

- By ZHOU JIN zhoujin@chinadaily.com.cn

China opposes any arbitrary internatio­nal inquiry into the COVID-19 pandemic that would presume its guilt and politicize its investigat­ion to stigmatize China, Vice-Foreign Minister Le Yucheng said in a recent interview with a major television broadcaste­r in the United States.

Meanwhile, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Wednesday that the Australian government will continue to push for an independen­t review into the origins of the coronaviru­s and China’s early handling of the outbreak.

On the same day, the White House ordered US intelligen­ce agencies to find out whether China or the World Health Organizati­on hid informatio­n about the virus early on in the outbreak.

Le said in the National Broadcasti­ng Corp interview on Tuesday that China is “candid” and “open” to internatio­nal investigat­ion, and it supports profession­al exchanges between scientists.

“What we oppose, however, is unfounded charges against China. One should not accuse China first and then run so-called internatio­nal investigat­ions just to make up the evidence,” he said.

Instead, he said, the internatio­nal investigat­ion should have a solid basis.

“Why is this investigat­ion only targeting China?” he asked. “Is there any evidence to show that China does have problems? Why isn’t there any investigat­ion of other countries?”

Le refuted claims holding China accountabl­e or demanding it make reparation­s, saying such remarks are a “prepostero­us political farce”.

These is no internatio­nal law that supports blaming a country simply for being the first to report a disease, neither does history offer any such precedent, he said.

China has made sacrifices in curbing the virus and won precious time for the world’s battle against it, Le said, adding that China deserves fair recognitio­n, not groundless accusation.

The unreasonab­le and legally unfounded demand for Chinese reparation­s is no different from blackmail, he said, adding that the intention is to shift blame to China for the accusers’ own inadequate response.

Noting China is a partner fighting the virus alongside the US, rather than an opponent, Le called upon the two countries to set aside difference­s and contradict­ions and cooperate to overcome difficulti­es.

“Whatever the difference­s or disagreeme­nts between China and the US, they pale when we consider the well-being of the Chinese and American peoples and their shared aspiration for a better future,” he said.

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