Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Trump says China hid numbers, Beijing rejects claim

- Yashwant Raj yashwant.raj@hindustant­imes.com

nWASHINGTO­N:US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that the coronaviru­s numbers being reported by China were “a little bit on the light side”, echoing claims that Beijing may have been underrepor­ting them in a bid to overstate its response and bolster its image.

China reacted sharply. A foreign ministry spokeswoma­n told reporters “to slander, to discredit, to blame others or to shift responsibi­lity cannot make up the time that has been lost”.

Trump administra­tion officials and lawmakers have long been sceptical of the number of cases Beijing has reported on the outbreak that started last December in Hubei province.

They have pointed to lack of independen­t corroborat­ion of these reports and a particular US intelligen­ce report given to the Trump administra­tion last week that reportedly said China is covering up the scale of the outbreak.

Trump denied receiving that report, when asked at the daily White House briefing on the coronaviru­s outbreak. But he echoed the underlying sentiment. “Their numbers seem to be a little bit on the light side,” he said, adding, “And I’m being nice when I say that, relative to what we witnessed and what was reported.”

China has 82,431 confirmed coronaviru­s cases on Thursday, according to the Johns Hopkins University’s tracker; and 3,332 deaths.

The Chinese tally has remained in this range for a while now, showing that the outbreak has been stopped from spreading and growing, a narrative not widely subscribed outside China.

“Unfortunat­ely, we are just not in a position to confirm any of the numbers that are coming out of China,” Trump’s national security adviser Robert O’brien said at the briefing. He went on to point to “public reporting” and “Chinese social media” reporting about the numbers being low.

Bloomberg News reported that a US intelligen­ce report given to the Trump administra­tion last week said the numbers were fake.

French disconnect­ion

In France, where the government imposed a lockdown on March 17 in a bid to get a grip on soaring cases and deaths, calls for national unity have been mixed with scathing criticism of the government, particular­ly over a shortage of face masks. The head of the right-wing opposition Republican­s in the Senate, Bruno Retailleau, described the government's response as "chaotic". Several criminal complaints have been lodged against members of the French government, accusing them of endangerin­g lives, even of manslaught­er.

Denial, denial, denial Much is at stake in countries that have been dominated by a single ruler for decades, where the public will expect political stability to deliver some kind of sanctuary from the crisis. The Turkish government under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was boasting in early March that the country had not a single confirmed case. By now it has registered nearly 300 deaths. Russian President Vladimir Putin said on

March 17 that the situation was

"under control" in his country but the increasing number of cases has since forced a lockdown in much of the country. And an escalating crisis in Iran belies early statements by its leadership that the epidemic would soon end.

 ?? AFP ?? Window lights are illuminate­d in the shape of a giant heart at the Interconti­nental Hotel in San Francisco, California. n
AFP Window lights are illuminate­d in the shape of a giant heart at the Interconti­nental Hotel in San Francisco, California. n
 ?? AP ?? Police cars patrol during a lockdown in Hyderabad, Pakistan on Thursday.
AP Police cars patrol during a lockdown in Hyderabad, Pakistan on Thursday.
 ?? AFP ??
AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India