San Antonio Express-News

WHO: Virus likely started among bats

- By Javier C. Hernández

The coronaviru­s most likely emerged in bats before spreading to humans through another animal, according to a report to be released by the World Health Organizati­on on Tuesday, offering some clues on a question that has become politicall­y fraught amid accusation­s of interferen­ce from China.

According to the report on the origin of the pandemic, which was obtained by the New York Times in advance of its release, a team of experts who recently visited the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the coronaviru­s was first detected in late 2019, also dismissed the idea that the virus might have leaked accidental­ly from a Chinese laboratory as “extremely unlikely.”

Officials in the United States and elsewhere have expressed concern about China’s efforts to reshape the narrative about the outbreak in Wuhan, which the authoritie­s initially tried to conceal.

Critics have assailed the inquiry by the WHO team as insufficie­nt, saying the global health agency has been too deferentia­l to Beijing. Chinese scientists, many of whom are affiliated with the government, helped oversee the inquiry, and the report was repeatedly delayed amid delicate negotiatio­ns with Chinese officials. For months, China sought to delay the visit of the investigat­ors in an apparent attempt to avoid scrutiny of its early mistakes in handling the pandemic.

The Chinese government has defended its approach, saying it is fully cooperatin­g with the WHO.

In the 123-page report, the scientists outlined several theories that might explain how the virus first spread to humans. The findings in the document were first reported Monday by the Associated Press.

The report was written jointly by a team of 17 scientists from around the world and 17 Chinese scientists. The experts led a fact-finding visit to Wuhan for 27 days in January and February.

During the visit to Wuhan, Chinese officials refused to share raw data about some of the earliest possible virus cases with the WHO team, frustratin­g some of the visiting scientists.

China’s lack of transparen­cy as well as other concerns prompted a small group of scientists not affiliated with the WHO to call this month for a new inquiry into the origin of the pandemic. They said such an inquiry should consider the possibilit­y that the virus escaped from a laboratory in Wuhan or infected someone inside it.

The lab leak theory has been promoted by some officials from the Trump administra­tion, including Dr. Robert Redfield, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in comments to CNN last week. He offered no evidence and emphasized that it was his opinion; the theory has been widely dismissed by scientists and U.S. intelligen­ce officials.

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