Daily Dispatch

Lab leak theory can’t be ruled out, say scientists

-

The origin of the novel coronaviru­s is still unclear and the theory that it was caused by a laboratory leak needs to be taken seriously until there is a rigorous data-led investigat­ion that proves it wrong, a group of leading scientists said.

Covid-19, which emerged in China in late 2019, has killed 3.34-million people, cost the world trillions in lost income and upended normal life for billions of people.

“More investigat­ion is still needed to determine the origin of the pandemic,” said the 18 scientists, including Ravindra Gupta, a clinical microbiolo­gist at the University of Cambridge, and Jesse Bloom, who studies the evolution of viruses at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre.

“Theories of accidental release from a lab and zoonotic spillover both remain viable,” the scientists, including David Relman, professor of microbiolo­gy at Stanford University, said in a letter to the journal Science.

The authors of the letter said the World Health Organisati­on’s investigat­ion into the origins of the virus had not made a “balanced considerat­ion” of the theory that it might have come from a laboratory incident.

In its final report, written jointly with Chinese scientists, a WHO-led team that spent four weeks in and around Wuhan in January and February, said the virus had probably been transmitte­d from bats to humans through another animal, and that a lab leak was “extremely unlikely” as a cause.

But there are myriad different ideas about the origin of the virus including a series of conspiracy theories.

“We must take hypotheses about both natural and laboratory spillovers seriously until we have sufficient data,” the scientists said, adding that an intellectu­ally rigorous and dispassion­ate investigat­ion needed to take place.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa