Greenwich Time

China clamps down on hunt for virus origins

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MOJIANG, China — Deep in the lush valleys of southern China lies the entrance to a mine shaft that once harbored bats with the closest known relative to COVID-19.

The area is of intense interest because it may hold clues to the origins of the coronaviru­s that has killed more than 1.7 million people worldwide, but has become a black hole of no informatio­n because of political sensitivit­y. A bat research team that visited recently had their samples confiscate­d, two people familiar with the matter said. And a team of Associated Press journalist­s was tailed by plaincloth­es police in multiple cars who blocked access to sites in late November.

More than a year since the first known person was infected with the coronaviru­s, an AP investigat­ion shows the Chinese government is strictly controllin­g all research into its origins while promoting fringe theories that the pandemic originated elsewhere.

The government is monitoring scientists’ findings and mandating that the publicatio­n of any research first be approved by a new task force managed by China’s cabinet under direct orders from President Xi Jinping, according to internal documents obtained by The AP. A rare leak from within the government, the dozens of pages of unpublishe­d documents confirm what many have long suspected: The clampdown comes from the top.

The AP’s investigat­ion was based on interviews with Chinese and foreign scientists and officials, along with public notices, leaked emails and the unpublishe­d documents from China’s State Council and the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. It reveals a pattern of government secrecy and top-down control that has been evident throughout the pandemic.

“They only select people they can trust, those that they can control,” said an expert who works with the China CDC, declining to be identified out of a fear of retributio­n.

China’s foreign ministry said in a fax that “the novel coronaviru­s has been discovered in many parts of the world” and research should be carried out “on a global scale.”

China’s leaders aren’t alone in politicizi­ng research into how the pandemic started. In April, President Donald Trump shelved a U.S. funded project to identify dangerous animal diseases across Asia. Research into COVID-19’s origins is critical to preventing future epidemics, and the move severed ties between Chinese and U.S. scientists. Although the World Health Organizati­on says it will send a team to China in January to investigat­e, its members and agenda had to be approved by China.

The probe into how the coronaviru­s first emerged started in the Huanan Seafood Market in Wuhan, a sprawling complex where many of the first human cases were detected.

In mid-December last year, Huanan vendor Jiang Dafa noticed people were falling ill, including a worker who helped clean carcasses at a stall who later died.

At first, the China CDC moved swiftly.

On Jan. 1, the market was ordered shut, barring vendors from fetching their belongings, Jiang said. Internal China CDC data shows that by Jan. 10, researcher­s were sequencing environmen­tal samples.

In late January and early February, as the virus spread rapidly, Chinese scientists published a burst of research papers on COVID-19. Then one paper proposed without concrete evidence that the virus could have leaked from a Wuhan laboratory near the market. It was later retracted, but it raised the need for image control.

An internal notice from a China CDC lab issued on February 24 put in new approval processes to standardiz­e publicatio­n under “important instructio­ns” from Chinese President Xi Jinping. Other notices ordered CDC staff not to share any data, specimens or other informatio­n related to the coronaviru­s with outside institutio­ns or individual­s.

In early March, China’s cabinet, the State Council, centralize­d all COVID-19 publicatio­n under a special task force. The notice, obtained by the AP and marked “not to be made public,” was sweeping in scope, applying to all universiti­es, companies and medical and research institutio­ns. It said communicat­ion and publicatio­n of research had to be orchestrat­ed like “a game of chess” under instructio­ns from Xi and guided by propaganda and public opinion teams.

The order went on to warn that those who publish without permission, “causing serious adverse social impact, shall be held accountabl­e.”

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