Global Times

Biosecurit­y law aids labs against future infectious diseases

- By Liu Caiyu

China inaugurate­d the Biosecurit­y Law on Thursday, which is expected to further fortify the legal shield for the establishm­ent and safe operation of more bio labs as China attaches greater importance to biosecurit­y as part of national security.

The country’s progress in establishi­ng biosecurit­y could deal a firm blow to foreign attacks, like the conspiracy theory that “COVID- 19’ s source came from a Wuhan lab,” which the joint research by the WHO and China had concluded was “extremely unlikely.”

Under the new Biosecurit­y Law, China will continue to build and approve more labs specializi­ng in advanced pathogenic microbiolo­gy with a scrupulous and scientific manner, according to Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Xiang Libin.

China will carry out major scientific research to enhance its biosecurit­y science and technologi­cal capacity against future infectious diseases, Xiang said.

The ministry has examined and approved the constructi­on of three biosafety level- 4 labs, or P4 labs, and 88 biosafety level- 3 labs, or P3 labs, in China, he said.

Yang Zhanqiu, deputy director of the pathogen biology department at Wuhan University, said that the law on biosafety is a timely move for China to detail the constructi­on and management of biosafety labs and provide a legal shield for scientific projects on biosafety, including infectious diseases, to be carried out in a scrupulous and profession­al manner.

During the fight against the COVID- 19 epidemic, China swiftly built a number of P2 and P3 biosafety labs that provided strong technical support for the battle, experts noted. COVID- 19 nucleic acid tests are conducted at P2 labs.

Enhancing constructi­on of biosafety labs under the Biosafety Law is conducive for the country to launch quick responses, as well as efficient and safe research on major new infectious diseases in the future similar to the COVID- 19, Yang said.

The P4 lab of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which contribute­d a lot to China’s early research into the coronaviru­s, has long been a target of USled Western smears. The joint team of WHO and Chinese experts concluded that the theory that the novel coronaviru­s came from a lab leak was “extremely unlikely,” after visiting the lab and seeing its strict inspection and operating standards.

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