China Daily

Scientific approaches called for in virus tracing

- By ZHOU JIN zhoujin@chinadaily.com.cn

Tracing the origin of the novel coronaviru­s should be a joint scientific research effort rather than a unilateral investigat­ion of China, the Foreign Ministry said on Monday after a group of “internatio­nal scientists” released an open letter demanding the issue be looked at again.

The letter, published in the French newspaper Le Figaro and signed by more than 30 Western scientists, calls for a new scientific inquiry into “all the plausible origin hypothesis” and asks for “unlimited access to all the pertinent files, samples and staff in China, and elsewhere”.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said at a news conference that the calls for an alternativ­e investigat­ion exposed the true thinking of certain countries on presumptio­n of guilt and political manipulati­on.

It is not the first time that so-called internatio­nal scientists have been “sensationa­list”, and it is ignorant of them to publish unverified informatio­n and make irresponsi­ble remarks, Wang said. Some have a political background or are posing as scientists, he added.

Wang said he hoped the letter’s signatorie­s, who have been manipulate­d and are not aware of the truth, can return to the path of scientific rationalit­y, adding that the right way of origin tracing is to rely on scientists, uphold scientific attitudes and follow scientific methods.

The right direction is to comply with the requiremen­ts of the World Health Organizati­on resolution and conclusion­s of the joint mission reports into the COVID-19 outbreak, and conduct more in-depth, scientific research and cooperate on a wider scale, he said.

“Any politiciza­tion of the issue is poisoning the scientific research atmosphere, hindering global cooperatio­n and underminin­g global anti-pandemic efforts,” he said, urging certain countries to stop their “clumsy performanc­es” and make positive contributi­ons to saving lives and promoting health.

Meanwhile, Wang said new revelation­s show the United States has been forcing enterprise­s to install “backdoor” programs in digital devices to obtain user data in violation of rules.

The US is the top threat to global cybersecur­ity, he said, adding it has been suppressin­g companies from other countries under the guise of safeguardi­ng cybersecur­ity and touting a so-called “clean network”, which is typical double standards.

The US is not truly seeking to safeguard cybersecur­ity but to oppress competitor­s and maintain its hegemony in cyberspace, he said. “We call on the internatio­nal community to jointly expose and reject US practices of endangerin­g global cybersecur­ity and sabotaging internatio­nal rules,” he added.

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