The Intelligencer (Belleville)

Secrecy from China clouds start of the COVID-19 outbreak, report finds

Even the date when authoritie­s started searching for virus' origin is unclear

- DAKE KANG and MARIA CHENG

The Chinese government froze meaningful efforts to trace the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic, despite publicly declaring it supported an open scientific inquiry, an Associated Press investigat­ion has found.

The AP drew on thousands of pages of undisclose­d emails and documents, leaked recordings, and dozens of interviews that showed the freeze began far earlier than previously known — in the first weeks of the outbreak — and involved political and scientific infighting in China as much as internatio­nal finger-pointing.

Crucial initial efforts were hindered by bureaucrat­s in Wuhan trying to avoid blame who misled the central government; the central government, which silenced Chinese scientists and subjected visiting UN officials to stage-managed tours; and the World Health Organizati­on itself, which may have compromise­d early opportunit­ies to gather critical informatio­n, according to internal materials obtained by AP.

Secrecy clouds the beginning of the COVID-19 outbreak. Even the date when Chinese authoritie­s first started searching for the virus' origins is unclear. The first publicly known search for the coronaviru­s took place on Dec. 31, 2019, when Chinese Center for Disease Control scientists visited the Wuhan market where many early COVID-19 cases surfaced.

But WHO officials heard of an earlier inspection of the market on Dec. 25, 2019, according to a recording of a confidenti­al WHO meeting provided to the AP. In the recording, WHO's top virus expert, Peter Ben Embarek, told colleagues that Chinese officials that day were “looking at what was on sale in the market, whether all the vendors have licenses (and) if there was any illegal (wildlife) trade.”

Ben Embarek said the probe was “not routine” and WHO would “try to figure out what happened.” Such a probe has never been publicly mentioned by Chinese authoritie­s or WHO.

WHO said in an email that it was “not aware” of any investigat­ion on Dec. 25, 2019. Other experts said any visit to the market that day would be significan­t, especially if animal samples were taken because they could be critical evidence of how COVID-19 jumped to humans.

Early on, Chinese scientists were silenced and politician­s took control.

As WHO negotiated with China for a mission to investigat­e COVID-19 in early 2020, it was China's Foreign Ministry, not scientists, that decided the terms. China refused a visa for Embarek, then the WHO's top animal virus expert.

The itinerary dropped nearly all the items linked to an origins search, according to draft agendas obtained by AP.

Taking charge of the WHO visit was Liang Wannian, an epidemiolo­gist close to top Chinese officials who was widely seen as pushing the party line, not science-backed policies, according to nine people familiar with the situation who declined to be named due to the sensitivit­y of the matter. Liang also ordered the Wuhan market disinfecte­d before samples could be collected and promoted an implausibl­e theory that COVID-19 originated from frozen food imported into China.

On a train ride with Dr. Bruce Aylward, a senior adviser to WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, Liang lobbied the UN agency to praise China's response in its public report.

The new section was so flattering that colleagues emailed Aylward to suggest he “dial it back a bit.”

By the time WHO led another visit to Wuhan in January 2021, the origins hunt had become highly politicize­d. Liang organized market workers to tell WHO experts no live wildlife was sold and cut recent photos of wildlife at the market from the report.

The WHO team concluded a lab leak was “extremely unlikely.” But just months later, WHO chief Tedros said it was “premature” to dismiss the lab leak theory and pressed China to be more transparen­t, infuriatin­g Chinese officials

China told WHO any future missions to find the origins of COVID-19 should be elsewhere, according to a letter obtained by AP. Since then, global co-operation has ground to a halt.

Chinese scientists are still under heavy pressure, according to 10 researcher­s, medical experts and health officials. Researcher­s who published papers on the coronaviru­s ran into trouble with Chinese authoritie­s. Others were barred from travel abroad for conference­s and WHO meetings.

The head of the China CDC Institute of Viral Disease was forced to retire over the release of sensitive market data, according to a former China CDC official who declined to be named, fearing repercussi­ons.

“It has to do with the origins, so they're still worried,” the official said. “If you try and get to the bottom of it, what if it turns out to be from China?”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Feb. 3, 2021, file photo, a security person moves journalist­s away from the Wuhan Institute of Virology after a World Health Organizati­on team arrived for a field visit, in Wuhan, China.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Feb. 3, 2021, file photo, a security person moves journalist­s away from the Wuhan Institute of Virology after a World Health Organizati­on team arrived for a field visit, in Wuhan, China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada