Qatar Tribune

WHO says first alerted to virus by its own office, not China

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THE World Health Organizati­on has updated its account of the early stages of the COVID crisis to say it was alerted by its own office in China, and not by China itself, to the first pneumonia cases in Wuhan.

The UN health body has been accused by US President Donald Trump of failing to provide the informatio­n needed to stem the pandemic and of being complacent towards Beijing, charges it denies.

On April 9, WHO published an initial timeline of its communicat­ions, partly in response to criticism of its early response to the outbreak that has now claimed more than 521,000 lives worldwide.

In that chronology, WHO had said only that the Wuhan municipal health commission in the province of Hubei had on December 31 reported cases of pneumonia.

WHO director Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a press conference on April 20 the first report had come from China, without specifying whether the report had been sent by Chinese authoritie­s or another source.

But a new chronology offers a more detailed version of events. It indicates that it was the WHO office in China that on December 31 notified its regional point of contact of a case of “viral pneumonia” after having found a declaratio­n for the media on a Wuhan health commission website on the issue.

The same day, WHO’s epidemic informatio­n service picked up another news report transmitte­d by the internatio­nal epidemiolo­gical surveillan­ce network ProMed -- based in the US -- about the same group of cases of pneumonia from unknown causes in Wuhan.

WHO director Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a press conference on April 20 the first report had come from China, without specifying whether the report had been sent by Chinese authoritie­s or another source

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