Indian ‘seeker’ among sleuths who raised heat on lab theory
A GROUP CALLED DRASTIC BEGAN LOOKING INTO CLUES FROM SCIENTIFIC DATA SOON AFTER THE PANDEMIC BEGAN
NEW DELHI: A motley group of social media detectives with backgrounds in science have been leading efforts to uncover clues about the origins of the Sars-cov-2 virus, particularly if it leaked from a lab in Wuhan – according to new reports, which identifies one of them as an Indian based, possibly, in Bhubaneswar.
A group of 24 people that calls itself DRASTIC, or Decentralized Radical Autonomous Search Team Investigating COVID-19, began looking into clues from Chinese scientific databases shortly after the pandemic began, Newsweek reported earlier this week.
The clues involve scientific papers that detail how researchers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) and other Chinese establishments were investigating coronaviruses found in an abandoned mine, how these studies may have been meant to find a vaccine, and some instances where authorities attempted to conceal data.
Some of these have now come into the spotlight. Top American health official Anthony Fauci said on Thursday that China should release the health records of nine people, including six miners who fell sick in 2012 – an incident that may have kick-started a biological investigation into Sars-like coronaviruses, according to the clues uncovered by DRASTIC.
“It starts with an outbreak of severe unexplained pneumonia cases in 2012, which saw six miners hospitalised. Three of them died, and the cause for their illness was suspected to be due to “Sars-like COV”. The symptoms were almost indistinguishable from COVID-19,” said the Indian who uses the nom de guerre The Seeker on Twitter, and was identified as among the DRASTIC members who pieced together the most crucial of the clues.
The group was also profiled in a piece by CNET on April 15, which identifies as The Seeker being a resident of Bhubaneswar, though in both cases, the person asked to remain anonymous.
According to tweets by DRASTIC members, particularly The Seeker, the illness of the miners may be the first time a predecessor or a close relative of the Sarscov-2 virus may have infected
“WIV went on a yearslong investigation into the same mine, on the lookout for what afflicted the miners,” The Seeker wrote on April 8.
The clues the group has found has led it to suspect the WIV researchers were likely investigating the pathogen that caused the 2012 illness (and death) of the men who went into the abandoned mine, and one of the pathogens they isolated may have leaked from the lab at a later date. Viruses are typically isolated and grown in order to study them, a process that requires high levels of biosafety standards.
In public, one of the lead researchers of WIV, Shi Zhengli, said the miners’ death and illness was due to a fungal infection but DRASTIC found evidence it may have been a Sars-like coronavirus.
The illness of the miners caught the attention of the group when they found a Master’s thesis by a medical student in 2013, who described symptoms that are now associated with Covid-19. The thesis also described the illness as suspected to have been caused by a Sars-like coronavirus. A bulk of the clues the group found were in previous scientific papers and news reports – a technique often described as OSINT, or open source investigation. Chinese authorities have since restricted access to the CKNI database, where some of the crucial trails were found, Newsweek reported.
Officials and scientists around the world are now increasingly agreeing on the need for China to offer more access and disclose more data. These include detailed information about the projects WIV was undertaking, the origins of another coronavirus known as RATG13, which the Chinese scientists said were found in bats in a cave hundreds of kilometres from Wuhan, and the nature of the illness of three WIV researchers who were hospitalised right before the first confirmed cases of Covid-19 took place.
The debate over the origin of Sars-cov-2 has ranged from it having evolved naturally, to being engineered -- with one scenario falling somewhere in between: that it leaked from the WIV where it was being studied after being found in bats.
DRASTIC members also speak of overlapping genomic code snippets with other viruses for which Chinese experts have released the sequence, hypothesising the need to determine if the teams were carrying genetic modifications for further analysis.
The search for evidence for a lab role has been difficult, as is the hunt for a motive if the origin of the pandemic indeed lies in a lab.
NEW DELHI: The Delhi high court on Friday came down heavily on actor Juhi Chawla and two other complainants for filing a plea against the installation of 5G wireless network in the country, and issued a fine of ₹20 lakh for a “defective” suit aimed at “gaining publicity”.
The high court, irked by repeated disruptions in the previous June 2 hearing, also pulled up Chawla for posting the link for the court’s digital proceeding on social media and said that the plaintiffs “abused and misused the process of law”.
“…plaintiffs have filed the suit to gain publicity which is clear from the fact that plaintiff no 1 (Chawla) circulated the video conferencing link of this court on her social media accounts, which resulted in repeated disruptions of court proceedings,” Justice JR Midha said, dismissing the plea.
On Wednesday, the online hearing of the Delhi high court was interrupted three times by a user who sang songs from Chawla’s hit movies in the ’90s. Justice Midha then directed court officials to bar the user from the video conference and directed authorities to identify the disrupter and issue a contempt notice. The actor-environmentalist has posted the link for the video conference a day before on her Twitter account encouraging people to participate. Chawla and social workers Veeresh Malik and Teena Vachani moved the court on Monday, claiming that 5G technology can trigger serious, irreversible effect on humans with radiation and permanent damage to the natural ecosystems.
According to the World Health Organization, no adverse health effect has been “causally linked with exposure to wireless technologies” despite several studies over the issue.
The judge said that the plea was not maintainable as the plaintiffs had no knowledge about the issues of health risks that were being raised. The suit is “stuffed with unnecessary, scandalous, frivolous and vexatious averments”, justice Midha said, underscoring that the complainants should have first reached out to the government with their concerns before approaching the court.