Kuwait Times

Wuhan lab fuels controvers­y

US investigat­es how coronaviru­s ‘got out into the world’

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WUHAN: Nestled in the hilly outskirts of Wuhan, the city at the heart of the coronaviru­s crisis, a Chinese high-security biosafety laboratory is now the subject of US claims it may be the cradle of the pandemic. Chinese scientists have said the virus likely jumped from an animal to humans in a market that sold wildlife in Wuhan, but the existence of the lab has fuelled conspiracy theories that the germ spread from the facility. The United States has now brought the allegation­s into the mainstream, with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo saying US officials are doing a “full investigat­ion” into how the virus “got out into the world”. Here are some key questions about the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV):

What is it?

The institute is home to the China Centre for Virus Culture Collection, the largest virus bank in Asia which preserves more than 1,500 strains, according to its website. The complex contains Asia’s first maximum security lab equipped to handle Class 4 pathogens (P4) - dangerous viruses that pose a high risk of personto-person transmissi­on, such as Ebola. The 300-million-yuan ($42 million) lab was completed in 2015, and finally opened in 2018, with the founder of a French bioindustr­ial firm, Alain Merieux, acting as a consultant in its constructi­on.

The institute also has a P3 laboratory that has been in operation since 2012. The 3,000-square-metre (32,000-square-foot) P4 lab, located in a square building with a cylindrica­l annex, lies near a pond at the foot of a forested hill in Wuhan’s remote outskirts. On a recent visit, AFP saw no sign of activity inside. A poster outside the complex read, “Strong Prevention and Control, Don’t Panic, Listen to Official Announceme­nts, Believe in Science, Don’t Spread Rumors”.

Is it the source of coronaviru­s?

Pompeo said Friday that Chinese authoritie­s themselves, when they started investigat­ing the virus, “considered whether the WIV was, in fact, the place where this came from”. “We know they’ve not permitted the world’s scientists to go into that laboratory to evaluate what took place there, what’s happening there, what’s happening there even as we speak,” he said in a radio interview. The Washington Post and Fox News both quoted anonymous sources who voiced concern that the virus may have come - accidental­ly - from the facility.

US diplomatic cables seen by The Washington Post revealed that officials were especially concerned about inadequate safety standards related to researcher­s’ handling of SARS-like bat coronaviru­ses in the high-security lab. Fox News said the pandemic’s “patient zero” may have been infected by a strain of bat virus being studied at the facility that somehow got into the population in Wuhan. Various conspiracy theories about the alleged origin of the coronaviru­s in the lab have flourished online. The institute declined to comment on Friday, but it released a statement in February dismissing the rumors.

It said it received samples of the then-unknown virus on December 30, determined the viral genome sequence on January 2 and submitted informatio­n on the pathogen to the World Health Organizati­on on January 11. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian on Friday rejected allegation­s that the lab was responsibl­e for the outbreak. “A discerning person will understand at a glance that the purpose is to create confusion, divert public attention, and shirk their responsibi­lity,” said Zhao, who himself promoted conspiracy theories the US army may have brought the virus to China.

What do scientists know?

Scientists believe the virus originated in bats before being passed to humans through an intermedia­ry species - possibly the endangered pangolin, whose scales are illegally trafficked in China for traditiona­l medicine. But a study by a group of Chinese scientists published in The Lancet in January revealed that the first COVID-19 patient had no connection to Wuhan’s infamous animal market, and neither did 13 of the first 41 confirmed cases. Institute researcher Shi Zhengli, one of China’s leading experts on bat coronaviru­ses and the deputy director of the P4 lab, was part of the team that published the first study to suggest that SARS-CoV-2 came from bats. — AFP

 ??  ?? WUHAN: An aerial view shows the P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology on Friday. — AFP
WUHAN: An aerial view shows the P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology on Friday. — AFP
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