Bangkok Post

WHO mission in disarray:

Beijing blocks entry to team at 11th hour

- AFP

An expert mission to China to find the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic has stumbled before it even began, with the head of the World Health Organizati­on complainin­g that Beijing was blocking the team from entering the country.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said he was “very disappoint­ed” with the last-minute bar on entry, in a rare castigatio­n of Beijing from the UN body.

A 10-strong team was due to arrive in China this week after months of painstakin­g negotiatio­ns.

Beijing is determined to control the origin story of the virus, which has killed more than 1.8 million people so far and laid waste to global economies.

The first cases of the coronaviru­s were recorded in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019, prompting accusation­s of chaotic, secretive handling by Chinese authoritie­s which led to its spread overseas.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly called the pandemic the “China virus”.

But Beijing has so far resisted pressure for a full independen­t probe into the early days of the outbreak. Instead, it has seeded doubt as to whether the pandemic even started inside its borders.

The WHO mission was billed as a way to cut through the rancour and seek clear answers on how the virus apparently jumped from animals to humans.

But with some of the team already in transit, Beijing had yet to grant them entry, the WHO chief said.

“Today, we learned that Chinese officials have not yet finalised the necessary permission­s for the team’s arrivals in China,” said Mr Tedros.

“I am very disappoint­ed with this news, given that two members had already begun their journeys and others were not able to travel at the last minute.”

He stressed that he had been in contact with senior Chinese officials to make clear “that the mission is a priority for WHO and the internatio­nal team”.

“I have been assured that China is speeding up the internal procedure for the earliest possible deployment,” Mr Tedros added.

The mission was hugely sensitive and neither the WHO nor China had until now confirmed when it was specifical­ly due to start.

WHO emergencie­s director Michael Ryan said the problem was a lack of visa clearances.

“We trust and we hope that this is just a [logistical] and bureaucrat­ic issue that can be resolved very quickly,” he said.

“We were all operating on the on the understand­ing that the team would begin deployment today.”

He added that two members of the team travelling from far away had set off early on Tuesday, before it became clear that the necessary approvals had not in fact been received.

He stressed the “absolute critical nature” of the mission, acknowledg­ing that the situation was “frustratin­g and ... disappoint­ing”.

There was no immediate comment from China.

The origins of Covid-19 remain bitterly contested, lost in a fog of recriminat­ions and conjecture from the internatio­nal community, as well as obfuscatio­n from Chinese authoritie­s determined to keep control of the virus narrative.

Scientists initially believed the virus jumped to humans at a market selling exotic animals for meat in the city of Wuhan.

Now, however, experts think the market may not have been the origin of the outbreak, but rather a place where it was amplified.

It is widely assumed that the virus originally came from bats, but the intermedia­te animal that transmitte­d it between bats and humans remains unknown.

 ??  ?? Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s

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