Arab Times

Premature to rule out COVID lab leak

WHO asks China to be more transparen­t

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BERLIN, July 15, (AP): The head of the World Health Organizati­on acknowledg­ed it was premature to rule out a potential link between the COVID-19 pandemic and a laboratory leak, and he said Thursday he is asking China to be more transparen­t as scientists search for the origins of the coronaviru­s.

In a rare departure from his usual deference to powerful member countries, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said getting access to raw data had been a challenge for the internatio­nal team that traveled to China earlier this year to investigat­e the source of COVID-19. The first human cases were identified in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

Tedros told reporters that the UN health agency based in Geneva is “asking actually China to be transparen­t, open and cooperate, especially on the informatio­n, raw data that we asked for at the early days of the pandemic.”

He said there had been a “premature push” to rule out the theory that the virus might have escaped from a Chinese government lab in Wuhan — underminin­g WHO’s own March report, which concluded that a laboratory leak was “extremely unlikely.”

“I was a lab technician myself, I’m an immunologi­st, and I have worked in the lab, and lab accidents happen,” Tedros said. “It’s common.”

In recent months, the idea that the pandemic started somehow in a laboratory — and perhaps involved an engineered virus — has gained traction, especially with President Joe Biden ordering a review of US intelligen­ce to assess the possibilit­y in May.

China has struck back aggressive­ly, arguing that attempts to link the origins of COVID-19 to a lab were politicall­y motivated and suggesting that the virus might have started abroad. At WHO’s annual meeting of health ministers in the spring, China said that the future search for COVID-19’s origins should continue — in other countries.

Most scientists suspect that the coronaviru­s originated in bats, but the exact route by which it first jumped into people — via an intermedia­ry animal or in some other way — has not yet been determined. It typically takes decades to narrow down the natural source of an animal virus like Ebola or SARS.

Tedros said that “checking what happened, especially in our labs, is important” to nailing down if the pandemic had any laboratory links.

“We need informatio­n, direct informatio­n on what the situation of this lab was before and at the start of the pandemic,” the WHO chief said, adding that China’s cooperatio­n was critical. “If we get full informatio­n, we can exclude (the lab connection).”

Throughout the pandemic, Tedros has repeatedly praised China for its speed and transparen­cy despite senior WHO officials internally griping about obfuscatio­n from their Chinese counterpar­ts.

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