Bangkok Post

WHO inquiry team flies into Wuhan

Will probe virus after quarantini­ng

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WUHAN: A team of experts from the World Health Organizati­on arrived in Wuhan yesterday to start a highly politicise­d probe into the origins of the coronaviru­s.

Their arrival coincided with China’s first death from Covid-19 in eight months and the country’s highest daily infection rate in 10 months.

The 10 scientists, who must complete a two-week quarantine before starting their work, arrived for their much-delayed mission to examine the origins of the pandemic.

The virus was first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019 and has since billowed out across the world killing nearly two million people, infecting tens of millions and eviscerati­ng the global economy.

State broadcaste­r CGTN showed the plane carrying the team arrive from Singapore to be met by Chinese officials in full HAZMAT [hazardous materials] suits.

Their trip comes as more than 20 million people are under lockdown in the north of China and one province has declared an emergency, with Covid-19 numbers climbing after several months of being relatively static.

China had largely brought the pandemic under control through strict lockdowns and mass testing, hailing its economic rebound as an indication of strong leadership by the communist authoritie­s.

But another 138 infections were reported by the National Health Commission yesterday, the highest single-day tally since March last year.

Clusters are still small compared with many countries contending with rampant infections and record numbers of deaths, but the virus fatality rang alarm bells across China.

Beijing is anxious to stamp out local clusters ahead of next month’s Lunar New Year festival, when hundreds of millions of people will be on the move across the country.

Health authoritie­s gave no details about the latest death except that it occurred in northern Hebei province, where the government has placed several cities under lockdown.

As infections have spread, northeaste­rn Heilongjia­ng declared an “emergency state” on Wednesday, telling its 37.5 million residents not to leave the province unless absolutely necessary.

As news of the latest death emerged yesterday, the hashtag “New virus death in Hebei” quickly ratcheted up 100 million views on Chinese social media platform Weibo. “I haven’t seen the words ‘virus death’ in so long, it’s a bit shocking! I hope the epidemic can pass soon,” one user wrote.

No deaths have been reported in mainland China since May last year, with the official death toll now standing at 4,635. The latest death comes as China braces for the scrutiny the arrival of the WHO scientists will bring.

Peter Ben Embarek, mission team leader, said the group would start with a mandatory quarantine at a hotel due to Chinese immigratio­n requiremen­ts. “Then, after the two weeks, we would be able to move around and meet our Chinese counterpar­ts in person and go to the different sites that we will want to visit,” he said.

He warned it “could be a very long journey before we get a full understand­ing of what happened”.

Beijing has argued that although Wuhan is where the first cluster of cases was detected, it is not necessaril­y where the virus originated.

“I don’t think we will have clear answers after this initial mission but we will be on the way,” Embarek added. “The idea is to advance a number of studies that were already designed and decided upon some months ago to get us a better understand­ing of what happened.”

The long-delayed WHO trip has sparked political tensions over allegation­s that Beijing tried to thwart the project.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Members of the World Health Organizati­on team tasked with investigat­ing the origins of the virus on a bus before leaving Wuhan Tianhe Internatio­nal Airport in Wuhan.
REUTERS Members of the World Health Organizati­on team tasked with investigat­ing the origins of the virus on a bus before leaving Wuhan Tianhe Internatio­nal Airport in Wuhan.

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