China Daily

‘Lab leak’ theory unfounded

Claim about institute workers’ infection ‘created out of thin air’, researcher says

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The Wuhan Institute of Virology has never engineered or leaked the novel coronaviru­s and no staff members have ever contracted the virus, a researcher from the institute said on Thursday.

Yuan Zhiming, who is also director of the National Biosafety Laboratory in Wuhan, Hubei province, said that the institute had not come in contact with, preserved or researched the virus before Dec 30, 2019.

“The infrastruc­ture, management levels, team compositio­n and working protocols at the institute’s P4 biosafety laboratory are the same as other P4 labs in operation around the world,” he said at a news conference held by the State Council Informatio­n Office. “Since the laboratory began operating in 2018, no laboratory leaks or human infection incidents have ever happened.”

Yuan said the laboratory has stable and reliable biosafety precaution­s in place, and has establishe­d complete biosafety management systems and a profession­al team to strengthen, manage and maintain its operation.

Dismissing the claim that three workers at the institute were infected with the disease in November 2019, Yuan said those spreading the accusation had never provided any names of the alleged researcher­s. “The claim has been created out of thin air,” he said.

Zeng Yixin, vice-minister of the National Health Commission, added that the institute had never carried out gain-of-function experiment­s. He added that the closest strain to the novel coronaviru­s studied at the institute only shared 96.2 percent of their genome sequences, which is not similar enough to be determined as the novel coronaviru­s’ progenitor.

Yuan said that when the outbreak occurred in Wuhan in December 2019, the institute quickly confirmed the pathogen was a new coronaviru­s, isolated the strain and analyzed and shared its full genome sequence with the world.

“These research results have laid a foundation for developing tests, screening for antiviral drugs and vaccine research, and have bought time for the global fight against the disease,” he said.

Yuan said unfounded accusation­s that the institute was the source of the outbreak had disrupted its scientific research as well as internatio­nal communicat­ion and cooperatio­n.

From Jan 14 to Feb 10, Chinese and internatio­nal experts organized by the World Health Organizati­on visited Wuhan to study the origin of the virus.

Liang Wannian, head of Chinese experts on the WHO-convened mission, said that to fully assess the “laboratory leak” theory, the team had conducted field inspection­s at the institute, and in particular, learned about the institute’s implementa­tion of management and safety regulation­s, as well as its past and current research projects.

“The joint expert panel had already performed detailed reviews and inspection­s of the lab in Wuhan, and reached the conclusion that it is extremely unlikely that the virus originated from a laboratory,” he said.

If some scientists still decide to pursue this hypothesis, Liang said, Chinese researcher­s have suggested that they direct attention to P4 laboratori­es in other countries, which have so far not been visited by outside experts, and review these labs for possible safety risks and leak incidents.

Since the laboratory began operating in 2018, no laboratory leaks or human infection incidents have ever happened.”

Yuan Zhiming, director of the National Biosafety Laboratory in Wuhan, Hubei province

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