China Daily (Hong Kong)

COVID: Recriminat­ion deteriorat­es cooperatio­n

- Contact the writers at huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

As of Tuesday, the world has reported more than 183.9 million confirmed coronaviru­s cases, with COVID-19 deaths nearing 4 million, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

“We believe the strongest clue from new, credible and peer-reviewed evidence in the scientific literature is that the virus evolved in nature, while suggestion­s of a laboratory-leak source of the pandemic remain without scientific­ally validated evidence that directly supports it in peer-reviewed scientific journals,” the new letter says.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said at a news briefing on Wednesday that the report of the China-WHO joint mission, released in March, made it clear that a lab leak is extremely unlikely as the origin.

Regrettabl­y, some in the United States have blatantly engaged in political maneuverin­g on the issue of origin, and their only purpose is to shift to China the responsibi­lity for their own failure, Wang said.

Such political tricks won’t change the fact that over 600,000 lives were lost in the US due to politician­s who have ignored science and politicize the anti-pandemic response, he added.

The authentic conclusion reached by the WHO joint mission will not change, Wang said, adding that origin tracing of the virus will not be limited to a single region and should be carried out in many countries and regions.

In late May, US President Joe

Biden called for a US-based probe into the origins of COVID-19. The administra­tion gave US intelligen­ce agencies 90 days to report on whether the virus originated from an animal source or from a laboratory accident.

Almost a month later, Biden administra­tion officials cautioned that the 90-day review may not produce a “definitive” explanatio­n, The Wall Street Journal reported on June 27.

Beijing has strongly opposed the politiciza­tion of COVID-19 origin tracing, saying that it is a scientific issue on which China has always maintained an open and transparen­t attitude.

The Lancet letter’s authors also said allegation­s and conjecture do not help, as they do not facilitate access to informatio­n or an objective assessment of the virus’ pathway that might help to prevent a future pandemic.

“Recriminat­ion has not, and will not, encourage internatio­nal cooperatio­n and collaborat­ion,” they said.

“It is time to turn down the heat of the rhetoric and turn up the light of scientific inquiry if we are to be better prepared to stem the next pandemic, whenever it comes and wherever it begins,” they wrote.

The authors are scientists from universiti­es and institutes in countries including the US, the United Kingdom, Germany, Spain, Italy, Australia, Malaysia and China’s Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region.

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