Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

WHO chief, Chinese premier discuss collab on Covid-19 origins

- ANADOLU

ANKARA – World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang met in Beijing on Saturday and discussed the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19 pandemic), including investigat­ion on the origins of the virus.

“We discussed #COVID19 and the need for an aggressive effort on #Vaccinequi­ty this year to vaccinate 70 percent of all population­s. Solidarity is key to ensuring access and affordabil­ity of vaccines,” he said on Twitter.

Tedros reiterated that vaccine inequity is the biggest obstacle in ending the pandemic.

“We also discussed the need for stronger collaborat­ion on #COVID19 virus origins, rooted in science and evidence. I welcomed his support to strengthen @WHO and discussion about a #Pandemicac­cord to advance global preparedne­ss,” he added.

The exact origin of the virus, which has killed nearly 6 million people worldwide, remains a mystery.

While there are theories that it leaked from a laboratory from Wuhan, where Covid-19 was first detected in late 2019, there is not enough scientific evidence to back the claim. China has also denied the allegation­s repeatedly.

According to China’s staterun Xinhua news agency, Li, who welcomed Tedros at the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics, China will continue to support the WHO in fighting the pandemic and safeguardi­ng human health.

Li called for solidarity, cooperatio­n and more understand­ing among members of the internatio­nal community to defeat the pandemic.

Tedros also met President of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee Thomas Bach “to discuss next steps to promote sport and health.”

A WHO team of internatio­nal experts, which visited Wuhan in January 2021, concluded that the virus was most likely transferre­d from bats to humans, and termed the laboratory leak theory “extremely unlikely.”

In August 2021, a new WHO investigat­ion team was formed after criticism from China that the March study had been “politicize­d.” ■

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada