China Daily

China sets example for vaccine openness

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China has overcome difficulti­es to facilitate two trips undertaken by internatio­nal experts in the country during the COVID-19 outbreak, setting an example for global cooperatio­n and openness, a Foreign Ministry official said on Friday.

The World Health Organizati­on has dispatched two teams of experts to visit China since the epidemic broke out. The trip last February aimed at expanding knowledge on effective disease control measures, and the other from Jan 14 to Feb 10 strove to enhance understand­ing of the virus’ origins.

Yang Tao, director-general of the ministry’s Department of Internatio­nal Organizati­ons and Conference­s, said at a briefing that during these visits China was coping with local outbreaks or infection clusters, and some experts had to be pulled from the frontline to join the mission.

By addressing challenges and organizing the two visits, China has played an exemplary role in implementi­ng resolution­s adopted by the World Health Assembly, he said.

“It shows that China has always been open and transparen­t. China’s prevention and control efforts are conducted in the sunshine, and there is nothing to hide,” Yang said.

However, following the recent trip, a handful of countries have jumped to attack WHO experts for patronizin­g China and conspired to sign a joint statement objecting to an upcoming final report summarizin­g findings from the trip.

“Such acts are a politiciza­tion of scientific questions and a double standard,” Yang said.

“Political manipulati­on will damage the global battle against the disease and may result in more lost lives, which is extremely immoral.”

The briefing in Beijing was attended by diplomats from about 50 countries, the Arab League and the African Union.

Feng Zijian, deputy directorge­neral of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said on Friday that experts participat­ing in the recent visit have all agreed the mission had progressed smoothly as planned and they reached their goals.

The team concluded during an earlier briefing that the virus most likely first appeared in humans after spilling over from an animal, and the theory that the virus leaked from laboratori­es is extremely unlikely.

Feng said that to pinpoint the origin of the virus, it is significan­t to launch a global search for early infections and early cases testing positive for the virus.

More sampling and testing of bats and other animals susceptibl­e to the virus should be implemente­d across the globe. The role of cold-chain and cold products in aiding virus transmissi­on is worth exploring further, he said.

Yang added that China is willing to continue cooperatio­n with the internatio­nal community and will provide assistance within its capacity.

As the first major economy to declare COVID-19 vaccines a global public good, he said, China will not impose export restrictio­ns on vaccines and will help boost vaccine accessibil­ity in developing countries.

The latest data from the National Health Commission show that by Thursday, more than 91.3 million COVID-19 vaccine doses had been administer­ed nationwide, up by nearly 5.5 million from Wednesday.

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