The Mail on Sunday

Bat Woman scientist denies she’s fled China over Covid

- By Ian Birrell

A FAMOUS Chinese scientist known for her controvers­ial work on bat-borne viruses has denied claims circulatin­g on social media that she has defected to Europe with a secret dossier about the outbreak.

Global Times, a state-owned tabloid paper in Beijing, reported that virologist Shi Zhengli – known as Bat Woman after leading bat- hunting expedition­s in dank caves – had rejected rumours of ‘ defecting with intelligen­ce files’.

The paper, a mouthpiece for the Communist Party, said she posted a denial on the social media site WeChat.

‘ No matter how difficult things are, it [defecting] shall never happen,’ the paper reported her saying. ‘We’ve done nothing wrong. With strong belief in science, we will see the day when the clouds disperse and the sun shines.’

The rumours on social media alleged Shi had smuggled her f amily along with hundreds of confidenti­al papers out of the country and was asking for s anctuary in t he United States embassy in Paris. The scientist, who works a t Wuhan Institute of Virology, played a key role in linking both this novel coronaviru­s and the 2002 Sars epidemic to bats in southern China. But her work has been at the centre of suggestion­s the pandemic may be linked to the laboratory.

Two months ago, Shi went on WeChat to state: ‘I promise with my life that the virus has nothing to do with the lab’ after Indian scientists said the virus possibly originated in the high security Wuhan bio-laboratory.

She said the outbreak was ‘a punishment by nature to humans’ unsanitary life styles’.

The virologist has also revealed she will be leading a major Chinese project to sample more viruses in bat caves. ‘The mission must go on,’ she told Scientific American magazine. ‘What we have uncovered is just the tip of an iceberg.’

She previously told the respected journal of being summoned back to Wuhan to investigat­e the emerging virus and her relief that its genome sequences did not match virus samples in the lab.

The Mail on Sunday revealed last month that her unravellin­g of the new diseases’s genetic compositio­n – crucial for developing diagnostic tests and vaccines – was muzzled, fuelling the growing concerns over Chinese cover-ups.

 ??  ?? EXPOSURE: The Wuhan scientists wear little in the way of personal protective equipment as they take samples from the bats before releasing them
EXPOSURE: The Wuhan scientists wear little in the way of personal protective equipment as they take samples from the bats before releasing them
 ??  ?? POOR PROTECTION: Internet pictures, since deleted, of Wuhan researcher­s capturing bats in the wild and in the caves where Covid-19 started
POOR PROTECTION: Internet pictures, since deleted, of Wuhan researcher­s capturing bats in the wild and in the caves where Covid-19 started
 ??  ?? PS: REMEMBER THE FRIDGE DOOR SEAL?
WORRYING: The shocking photograph, published by the MoS, showing the poor seal, inset, on the door of a Wuhan Institute fridge storing 1,500 virus strains, including the bat coronaviru­s behind the pandemic
PS: REMEMBER THE FRIDGE DOOR SEAL? WORRYING: The shocking photograph, published by the MoS, showing the poor seal, inset, on the door of a Wuhan Institute fridge storing 1,500 virus strains, including the bat coronaviru­s behind the pandemic
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? DENIAL: ‘Bat Woman’ virologist Shi Zhengli
DENIAL: ‘Bat Woman’ virologist Shi Zhengli

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