China Daily

Virology institute has a ‘clear conscience’

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn Mo Jingxi contribute­d to this story.

Recent rumors and misinforma­tion targeting the Wuhan Institute of Virology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences have seriously disturbed its research against the novel coronaviru­s epidemic, but it has “a clear conscience and no regrets” and will remain steadfast in continuing its work to fight the virus, the institute said in a public letter late on Wednesday.

Establishe­d in 1956, the institute, which is the top virology research agency in China and home to Asia’s highest-level biosafety lab, has been besieged by rumors and controvers­ies since the outbreak. These rumors included the virus being artificial­ly engineered or leaked from the institute’s P4 biosecurit­y lab.

They also attacked the institute’s leaders and its staff, claiming the first patient of the virus was one of its graduate students and questionin­g the competence of its director.

“These rumors have seriously harmed our researcher­s at the front line and have seriously disrupted our institute’s research mission to combat the epidemic,” the letter said.

The letter said its researcher­s have worked tirelessly, overcome many obstacles and produced numerous crucial and timely discoverie­s, including publishing the full genome of the virus, identifyin­g viral strains for vaccine and drug developmen­t, creating animal test models and diagnosing patients.

“Looking back at all the hard work we have done in the past month, we have a clear conscience and no regrets,” it said. “Research is the front line against the epidemic. Let us firm our resolve, tune out distractio­ns and jointly devote ourselves to our research and our work.”

Over the past week, the institute issued multiple statements refuting rumors implying the institute was responsibl­e for the novel coronaviru­s outbreak first discovered in Wuhan.

On Monday, Chen Quanjiao, a researcher from the institute, refuted a conspiracy theory posted by Sina Weibo user “Weiketiezh­i” who claimed that Chen had reported the head of the institute Wang Yanyi for selling experiment­al animals and leaking the virus from a lab.

“I never released any informatio­n reporting others and I’m very angry at those who impersonat­ed me to fabricate a false message,” Chen said in her statement published on the institute’s website. Chen added she will hold the rumor monger legally liable.

The World Health Organizati­on’s Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterran­ean said in a news briefing on Wednesday that the virus came from animals, and there is no evidence to support that it came from a lab.

Local cybersecur­ity authoritie­s in Jiangsu province released a public statement on Monday saying they have traced the account spreading the rumor to an overseas

IP and an organizati­on that specialize­s in propagatin­g anti-China content.

“Netizens should keep their eyes open and not be misled by others,” it said.

It is either bad intentions or absurd ignorance that has led certain individual­s and media outlets to publish sensationa­l statements that suggest the novel coronaviru­s is a bioweapon leaked from a lab, Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said on Thursday.

Geng mentioned the joint statement signed by 27 of the world’s leading scientists in the field of public health and published by the journal Lancet in support of the Chinese researcher­s, healthcare workers and medics fighting the outbreak. The statement strongly condemns the conspiracy theories about the outbreak circulatin­g on the internet.

“We’re not just battling the virus, but also conspiracy theories,” Geng said, noting that what is needed in the face of an epidemic is science, reason and cooperatio­n.

“We must seek the triumph of science over ignorance, dispel rumors with truth and replace prejudice with cooperatio­n,” he said at the ministry’s online news conference.

China hopes that the internatio­nal community will continue to work together against conspiracy theories and other “political viruses” while combating the novel coronaviru­s, Geng added.

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