The Borneo Post

China says WHO plan to audit labs in Covid origins probe ‘arrogant’

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BEIJING: China yesterday said the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) proposal to audit Chinese labs as part of further investigat­ion into the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic showed ‘disrespect’ and ‘arrogance towards science’.

Last week, WHO said a second stage of the internatio­nal probe should include audits of Chinese labs, amid increasing pressure from the US for an investigat­ion into a biotech lab in Wuhan.

The proposal outlined by WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s included ‘audits of relevant laboratori­es and research institutio­ns operating in the area of the initial human cases identified in December 2019’ — referring to the Chinese city of Wuhan.

But China’s vice-health minister Zeng Yixin told reporters yesterday that he was ‘extremely surprised’ by the plan, which he said showed ‘disrespect for common sense and arrogance towards science’.

Long derided as a rightwing conspiracy theory and vehemently rejected by Beijing, the idea that Covid-19 may have emerged from a lab leak has been gaining momentum.

Beijing has repeatedly insisted that a leak would have been ‘extremely unlikely’, citing the conclusion reached by a joint WHO-Chinese mission to Wuhan in January.

At the same time, Chinese officials and state media have pushed an alternate theory that the virus could have escaped from the US military research lab at Fort Detrick, Maryland.

Nationalis­t tabloid Global Times said it had collected five million signatures from Chinese web users on a petition to investigat­e the US lab.

Top officials have also amplified theories that the virus may have been imported with frozen food.

Yuan Zhiming, director of the National Biosafety Laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, told yesterday’s press conference ‘no pathogen leakage or staff infection accidents have occurred’ since the lab opened in 2018.

Zeng hit back at what he called ‘rumours’ about the lab, insisting that it had ‘never carried out gain-of-function research on coronaviru­ses, nor is there a socalled manmade virus’.

His comments were in reference to the type of research that has featured heavily in theories about a possible lab leak.

China has in recent days faced accusation­s from the WHO that it had not shared the necessary raw data during the first phase of the investigat­ion, with Tedros urging Beijing to ‘be transparen­t, to be open and cooperate’ on a second phase.

Tedros on Friday also called for more studies of animal markets in and around Wuhan.

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