Kuwait Times

WHO says virus ‘natural in origin’

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GENEVA: The World Health Organizati­on reiterated Friday that the new coronaviru­s was of natural origin after US President Donald Trump claimed he had seen evidence it originated in a Chinese lab. Scientists believe the killer virus jumped from animals to humans, emerging in China late last year, possibly from a market in Wuhan selling exotic animals for meat.

Trump claimed Thursday that he had seen proof that the Wuhan Institute of Virology was actually the source of the outbreak, although he refused to give details. Asked about Trump’s claim during a virtual press conference, WHO emergencie­s chief Michael Ryan stressed that the UN health agency had “listened again and again to numerous scientists who have looked at the sequences” of the virus.

“We are assured that this virus is natural in origin,” he said, reiteratin­g a stance the UN agency has expressed previously. The WHO said earlier Friday that it wanted to be invited to take part in Chinese investigat­ions into the animal origins of the pandemic, which in a matter of months has killed more than 230,000 people worldwide. “What is important is that we establish what that natural host for this virus is,” Ryan said, stressing the need to understand “how the animal-human species barrier was breached.”

“And the purpose of understand­ing that is that we can put in place the necessary prevention and public health measures to prevent that happening again anywhere,” he said. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s meanwhile continued Friday to push back against criticism lobbed at his organizati­on, by Trump in particular, who suspended Washington’s funding after accusing the UN agency of downplayin­g the seriousnes­s of the outbreak and kowtowing to China.

WHO ‘didn’t waste time’

Tedros said the WHO had sounded the highest level of alert by declaring that the COVID-19 outbreak constitute­d a “public health emergency of internatio­nal concern” on January 30, when there were no deaths and only 82 cases registered outside China. “We didn’t waste any time,” he told Friday’s briefing. “The world had enough time to intervene.”

His comments came after WHO’s emergency committee met for the first time since making its declaratio­n three months ago. “Of course, the pandemic remains a public health emergency of internatio­nal concern,” Tedros said after receiving the recommenda­tions from the committee, made up of 19 independen­t experts. While maintainin­g the global alert level, the experts made a range of general recommenda­tions on how the WHO and countries should adjust their response to the pandemic.

 ??  ?? TAEZ: An employee, wearing his personal protective equipment (PPE), looks through a microscope at the newly-inaugurate­d laboratory for coronaviru­s testing in Yemen’s third city of Taiz. —AFP
TAEZ: An employee, wearing his personal protective equipment (PPE), looks through a microscope at the newly-inaugurate­d laboratory for coronaviru­s testing in Yemen’s third city of Taiz. —AFP

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