New York Daily News

VIRUS HUNT SILENCED

China makes searches into pandemic’s start difficult

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

The area is of intense scientific interest because it may hold clues to the origins of the coronaviru­s that has killed more than 1.8 million people worldwide. Yet for scientists and journalist­s, it has become a black hole of no informatio­n because of political sensitivit­y and secrecy.

A bat research team visiting recently managed to take samples but had them confiscate­d, two people familiar with the matter said. Specialist­s in coronaviru­ses have been ordered not to speak to the press. And a team of Associated Press journalist­s was tailed by plaincloth­es police in multiple cars who blocked access to roads and 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, clamping down on some while actively promoting fringe theories that it could have come from outside China.

The government is handing out hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants to scientists researchin­g the virus’ origins in southern China and affiliated with the military, the AP has found. But it is monitoring their findings and mandating that the publicatio­n of any data or research must 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.

As a result, very little has been made public. Authoritie­s are severely limiting informatio­n and impeding cooperatio­n with internatio­nal scientists.

“What did they find?” asked Gregory Gray, a Duke University epidemiolo­gist who oversees a lab in China studying the transmissi­on of infectious diseases from animals to people. “Maybe their data were not conclusive, or maybe they suppressed the data for some political reason. I don’t know. I wish I did.”

The AP investigat­ion was based

on dozens of interviews with Chinese and foreign scientists and officials, along with public notices, leaked emails, internal data and the documents from China’s cabinet 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.

As the AP previously documented, this culture has delayed warnings about the pandemic, blocked

the sharing of informatio­n with the World Health Organizati­on and hampered early testing. Scientists familiar with China’s public health system say the same practices apply to sensitive research.

“They only select people they can trust, those that they can control,” said a public health expert who works regularly with the China CDC, declining to be identified out of fear of retributio­n. “Military teams and others are working hard on this, but whether it gets published all depends on the outcome.”

The pandemic has crippled Beijing’s reputation on the global stage, and China’s leaders are wary of any findings that could suggest they were negligent in its spread. The Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology and the National Health Commission, which are managing research into the coronaviru­s’ origins, did not respond to requests for comment.

“The novel coronaviru­s has been discovered in many parts of the world,” China’s Foreign Ministry said in a fax. “Scientists should carry out internatio­nal scientific research and cooperatio­n on a global scale.”

Some Chinese scientists say little has been shared simply because nothing of significan­ce has been discovered.

“We’ve been looking, but we haven’t found it,” said Zhang Yongzhen, a renowned Chinese virologist.

China’s leaders are far from alone in politicizi­ng research into the origins of the virus. In April, President Trump shelved a U.S.-funded project to identify dangerous animal diseases in China and Southeast Asia, effectivel­y severing ties between Chinese and American scientists and complicati­ng the search for virus origins.

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 ??  ?? Cave (top) in China’s Yunnan province was said to be used by a monk where bats lived. Contact between bats and people alarmed scientists. Fjiang Dafa (above) worked at Wuhan market where cases were seen.
Cave (top) in China’s Yunnan province was said to be used by a monk where bats lived. Contact between bats and people alarmed scientists. Fjiang Dafa (above) worked at Wuhan market where cases were seen.

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