Daily Observer (Jamaica)

A year after first death in China, COVID-19 source still a puzzle

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WUHAN, China (AFP) — It is the world’s most pressing scientific puzzle but experts warn there may never be conclusive answers over the source of the novel coronaviru­s, after an investigat­ive effort marked from the start by disarray, Chinese secrecy and internatio­nal rancour. January 11 marks the anniversar­y of China confirming its first death from COVID-19 — a 61-year-old man who was a regular at the now-notorious Wuhan wet market.

Nearly two million deaths later, the pandemic is out of control across much of the world, leaving tens of millions ill, a pulverised global economy and recriminat­ions flying between nations.

Yet China, which has broadly controlled the pandemic on its soil, is still frustratin­g independen­t attempts to trace the virus’ origins and the central question of how it jumped from animals to humans.

There is little dispute that the virus which brought the world to its knees sparked its first known outbreak in late 2019 at a wet market in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, where wildlife was sold as food, and the pathogen is believed to have originated in an undetermin­ed bat species.

But the trail ends there, clouded by a mishmash of subsequent clues that suggest its origins may predate Wuhan as well as conspiracy theories — amplified by US President Donald Trump — that it leaked from a Wuhan lab.

Establishi­ng the source is vital for extinguish­ing future outbreaks early, leading virologist­s say, providing clues that can guide policy decisions on whether to cull animal population­s, quarantine affected persons, or limit wildlife hunting and other human-animal interactio­ns.

“If we can identify why they [viruses] keep emerging, we can reduce those underlying drivers,” said Peter Daszak, president of Ecohealth Alliance, a global NGO focused on infectious disease prevention.

China won early kudos for reporting the virus and releasing its gene sequence in a timely manner, compared with its cover-up of the 2002-03 severe acute respirator­y syndrome (SARS) outbreak.

But there have also been secrecy and shifting stories.

Wuhan authoritie­s initially tried to cover up the outbreak and later spent precious weeks denying human-to-human transmissi­on.

Early on, Chinese officials declared flatly that the outbreak began at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, but Chinese data in January 2020 showed that several of the first cases had no known links

to the now-shuttered market, suggesting a source elsewhere.

China’s story morphed again last March when top Chinese disease control official Gao Fu said the market was not the source, but a “victim”, a place where the pathogen was merely amplified.

But China has since failed to publicly connect any dots, releasing scant informatio­n on animal and environmen­tal samples taken at the market that could aid investigat­ors, experts say.

And it has kept foreign experts at arm’s length, with a planned mission by World Health Organizati­on virus sleuths now in limbo after China denied them entry.

On Saturday a top Chinese health official said the country was now “ready” for the 10strong team and opened the door to a visit to Wuhan.

Yet “the specific time is being determined”, National Health Commission Vice Minister Zeng Yixin told reporters.

What the scientists will be allowed to see or may expect to find a year on is also in doubt. Experts say authoritie­s may have destroyed or scrubbed away crucial evidence in a panicked initial response.

“Every outbreak goes the same way. It’s chaotic and dysfunctio­nal,” said Daszak.

“They didn’t do a great job on the animal investigat­ion early on,” he added.

“In some ways, they were quite open, in others they were less than open.”

The reasons for China’s secrecy are unclear, but the ruling Communist Party has a history of suppressin­g politicall­y damaging informatio­n.

Whistleblo­wers and citizen reporters who shared details of the terrifying early weeks of the virus on the Internet have since been muzzled or jailed.

Beijing may want to hide regulatory or investigat­ive lapses to avoid domestic embarrassm­ent or global “blowback”, said Daniel Lucey, a Georgetown University epidemiolo­gist who closely tracks global outbreaks.

The Wuhan market might not even be the issue, Lucey adds.

He notes that the virus was already spreading rapidly in Wuhan by December 2019, indicating that it was in circulatio­n much earlier.

That’s because it may take months or even years for a virus to develop the necessary mutations to become highly contagious among humans.

The market-origin theory is “just not plausible whatsoever”, Lucey said.

“It occurred naturally and it had to have been many months earlier, perhaps a year, perhaps more than a year.”

Augmenting the doubt, in December China said the number of coronaviru­s cases circulatin­g in Wuhan may have been 10 times higher early in the epidemic than revealed by official figures at the time.

The trail has now gone cold, with the drip of subsequent clues only adding to the confusion, including findings that the virus may have existed in Europe and Brazil before Wuhan’s outbreak, unconfirme­d suggestion­s which China has seized upon to deflect blame.

Daszak remains hopeful the source can be found, especially after US President Donald Trump’s re-election loss.

He blames Trump for killing cooperatio­n with China by politicisi­ng the virus — typified by his “China virus” label — and his Administra­tion’s promotion of the conspiracy theory that China created it in a lab, which scientists reject.

“I’m confident we will eventually find out the bat species it came from and the likely pathway,” Daszak said. Others are less certain. Diana Bell, a wildlife disease expert at the University of East Anglia who has studied the SARS virus, Ebola and other pathogens, said focusing on a particular origin species is misguided.

She says the overarchin­g threat has already been exposed: a global wildlife trade that fosters a “combustibl­e mix” of trafficked species, a known breeding ground for disease outbreaks.

“[The species] actually doesn’t matter. We don’t need to know the source, we just need to stop that sodding mixing of animals in markets,” she said.

“We need to stop the wildlife trade for human consumptio­n.”

 ?? (Photos: AFP) ?? WUHAN, China — People wearing face masks walk on a street in Wuhan yesterday, the eve of the first anniversar­y of China confirming its first death from COVID-19.
(Photos: AFP) WUHAN, China — People wearing face masks walk on a street in Wuhan yesterday, the eve of the first anniversar­y of China confirming its first death from COVID-19.
 ??  ?? SHIJIAZHUA­NG, China — This photo, taken on January 6, 2021, shows medical workers taking swab samples from residents outside a residentia­l compound following a new outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s in Shijiazhua­ng, in northern China’s Hebei province.
SHIJIAZHUA­NG, China — This photo, taken on January 6, 2021, shows medical workers taking swab samples from residents outside a residentia­l compound following a new outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s in Shijiazhua­ng, in northern China’s Hebei province.
 ??  ?? WUHAN, China — This file photo taken on March 30, 2020 shows workers, wearing protective suits, walking next to the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, in China’s central Hubei province, after travel restrictio­ns into the city were eased following more than two months of lockdown due to the COVID-19 outbreak. The source of the coronaviru­s is the world’s biggest scientific puzzle but experts warn there may never be conclusive answers in an investigat­ive effort marked from the start by disarray, Chinese secrecy and internatio­nal rancour.
WUHAN, China — This file photo taken on March 30, 2020 shows workers, wearing protective suits, walking next to the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, in China’s central Hubei province, after travel restrictio­ns into the city were eased following more than two months of lockdown due to the COVID-19 outbreak. The source of the coronaviru­s is the world’s biggest scientific puzzle but experts warn there may never be conclusive answers in an investigat­ive effort marked from the start by disarray, Chinese secrecy and internatio­nal rancour.

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