Daily Maverick

KUNG-FLU PANDA

Science or propaganda?

- DM168. Continued from page 17 >>>

At a time when reliable informatio­n on the Covid-19 pandemic, treatment and vaccines is considered so vital that many countries – including South Africa – have criminalis­ed misinforma­tion, a group of influentia­l South African lobbyists has been amplifying discredite­d and unscientif­ic views and voices.

A South African private sector research group that has repeatedly lobbied against lockdown denies being associated with a global coalition of pandemic denialists and sceptics – but online evidence suggests otherwise. Pandemics Data and Analytics (Panda) is one of the loudest anti-lockdown groups globally, and openly states online that it hopes to “lead the world against lockdown”.

Panda is founded and run by Nick Hudson, CEO of the South African private equity fund Sana Partners, and co-founded by Peter Castleden, a senior executive at another South African financial services giant, Sanlam – the largest insurance company in Africa. Sanlam’s subsidiary Santam has been criticised for refusing to pay out policy-holders from the hospitalit­y industry on the basis that losses are the result of the government-imposed lockdown, not the Covid-19 pandemic.

In early February, British news outlet Byline

Times reported that Panda seemingly had links to a number of platforms in the rh that have promoted Covid-19 disinforma­tion. One is a UKbased group called the Covid-19 Assembly, which describes itself on its website as a “centre-point for all anti-lockdown groups worldwide”, and states that it is working with Panda.

In response to questions from DM168, Panda denied having links with the Covid-19 Assembly, calling the claims “baseless”.

But, on the Covid-19 Assembly website, it states: “We are working with organisati­ons such as Pandata19.org to help distribute accurate informatio­n”. The domain name Pandata19.org takes one to the Panda website.

When confronted with this, Panda – via Hudson – said: “It is not clear to us what that statement [on the Covid-19 Assembly website] means ... We do not, in principle, have an issue with working with other organisati­ons, but Panda is not in fact working with Covid-19 Assembly and we will take this up with them.”

Following the publicatio­n of the Byline

Times article, the Covid-19 Assembly website was briefly taken offline. When the website reappeared, certain changes had been made as a result of the Byline Times exposé, but archived web pages reveal that among the advisers to the Covid-19 Assembly are Patrick Fagan, former lead psychologi­st at Cambridge Analytica, the controvers­ial data-firm exposed for using fake news and disinforma­tion to support the Donald Trump presidenti­al campaign in the US and the Brexit campaign in the UK.

Another disinforma­tion outfit seemingly linked to Panda is the UK-based PCRclaims. co.uk, a project claiming to offer legal support for financial claims resulting from PCR (polymerase chain reaction) testing: the primary test being used globally to detect the coronaviru­s.

Panda again denied having any links to PCRclaims.co.uk, but Panda’s website is listed on the

PCRclaims.co.uk’s list of “Useful Websites”.

In response to this, Panda stated: “We trust that DM168 is not suggesting that the listing of [a] website as a useful link implies co-ordination between the lister and the listee.”

A web page suggesting a more direct affiliatio­n was taken offline immediatel­y after the

Byline Times article was published, but an archived version listing PCRclaims’ spokespeop­le names Hudson as a spokespers­on on economic matters. “Individual members of Panda are entitled to provide advice to other organisati­ons in their personal capacities and this does not, outside of the realm of conspiracy theories, imply co-ordination between the organisati­ons,” Panda told DM168.

“Mr Hudson has advised Panda that he has had no contact with PCRclaims for months.”

As an illustrati­on of the kind of disinforma­tion PCRclaims.co.uk promotes, the first item on its page of recommende­d resources is a link to a video on BitChute.com.

The Anti-Defamation League describes BitChute.com as “a hotbed for violent, conspirato­rial and hate-filled video propaganda, and a recruiting ground for extremists”. This includes material “calling for the exterminat­ion of Jews, glorifying violent beatings by police and anti-government militias, vilifying Black people and demonizing immigrants, the LGBTQ+ community and Muslims”.

Panda’s chief argument is that lockdowns cause more death and destructio­n than the Covid-19 pandemic itself. As such, it has repeatedly lobbied the South African government to loosen restrictio­ns.

But Panda’s core research findings have received withering criticism from independen­t experts who describe the group’s claims as little more than pseudoscie­ntific disinforma­tion.

In May 2020, for instance, Panda published its seminal report outlining the findings of its actuarial model, which claimed that the impact of lockdown would cause 30 times more deaths than the Covid-19 pandemic itself.

The report – sent to President Cyril Ramaphosa – received significan­t media coverage and no critical scrutiny. Since then Panda’s pandemic commentary, playing down the scale of the pandemic while casting doubt on the efficacy of PCR tests, has been regularly picked up by major media.

Two top British experts have now told DM168 that Panda’s actuarial model is deeply flawed. “This paper is unfortunat­ely a complete sham masqueradi­ng as science – it would never pass peer review in any reputable journal,” said Dr Deepti Gurdasani, a clinical epidemiolo­gist and statistica­l geneticist at Queen Mary University in London.

“It seems completely out of touch with reality and real-world evidence from across the globe … The estimated fatalities in South Africa from the model are clearly biased downwards – as the total mortality predicted by the model has already come to pass, and been exceeded in South Africa. The toll would have been much higher had the epidemic been allowed to continue unmitigate­d – we don’t need to imagine this, given this has already happened in some parts of the world.”

Gurdasani, who is published actively in the scientific literature on Covid-19, explained that “most of the assumption­s in model” are “unjustifie­d, and not based in real-world evidence or data.” The model ignores the impact of ‘long Covid’ on young people and children, which has been found to occur in between 10 %-20% of all infected individual­s, including 12 %-14% of children.

“It does not consider the impact of this on the economy. Neither does it sufficient­ly examine the impact of health systems being overwhelme­d without lockdowns and the impact of lack of healthcare on the population as a whole.”

She pointed out that the paper’s projection of a 10% increase in excess mortality for 10 years due to lockdown is devoid of “real-world data” that ignores the experience of other countries. The 20% increase in excess deaths in the UK since March 2020, for instance, is almost entirely accounted for by deaths from Covid-19 despite three UK lockdowns.

“While there may have been indirect impact of lockdowns on health, this seems to have been more than offset by fewer deaths from other causes, for example, flu, accidents and so on,” Gurdasani said.

Querying various technical assumption­s used in the paper (its extrapolat­ion from fatality rates in New York ignoring more robust datasets from elsewhere; presuming for no reason that “excess mortality loading weights per co-morbidity are 7 times higher for the elderly compared to the young”), she concluded that “the model has wildly overestima­ted indirect deaths from non-Covid-19 occurring during lockdowns. In fact, the real observatio­nal data from South Africa shows the huge impact Covid-19 can have and has had directly on mortality if allowed to spread, and the impact lockdowns have in containing these excess deaths.”

Panda’s Hudson repeatedly predicted in the first half of 2020 that just 10,000 people in South Africa would die of Covid-19.

“We are challenged to understand how any model for South Africa could reasonably produce a death forecast of more than 10,000,” Hudson stated in June 2020.

Analysis by Wits University School of Governance’s Alex van der Heever, published by GroundUp, has convincing­ly shown that excess deaths in 2020 and 2021 have been almost entirely due to Covid-19. What this strongly suggests is that the total number of Covid-19 deaths in South Africa thus far is nearing 140,000.

Gurdasani’s damning critique of the Panda report was echoed by top economist Professor Jonathan Portes of the School of Politics and Economics at Kings College London, who told DM168 that Panda’s “estimates of longerterm impacts on life expectancy resulting from economic damage are not credible nor based on evidence.”

Portes, a former Chief Economist at the UK Cabinet Office from 2008 to 2011 (previously Chief Economist at the Department of Work & Pensions), described Panda’s claim that the long-term economic impact will be 5% to 10% as “implausibl­e and unsupporte­d.” Similarly, the claim that at least 10% of the South African population would experience a 100% increase in relative mortality “is not based on any credible model or data.”

Portes was not blasé about the importance of taking into account longer-term impacts of lockdowns, but he dismissed Panda as a serious or credible source of analysis for this. “The long-term economic impacts of the pandemic are a matter of serious concern, and there are real dilemmas and tradeoffs,” he said.

“However, taking grossly exaggerate­d estimates of the longterm economic impacts of lockdowns and translatin­g them without evidence or context into health or mortality impacts is bad economics and bad policy.”

Panda has also strayed into anti-vaxxer disinforma­tion. Recently Panda published a report by physicist and climate science denier Dr Denis Rancourt, who was banned from the University of Ottawa after years of controvers­y, during which Rancourt’s dean questioned his “mental wellbeing”. The report – the subheading of which summarises its major findings as Measures do not prevent deaths, transmissi­on is not by contact, masks provide no benefit, vaccines are inherently dangerous – contains an entire section titled ‘Vaccines are inherently dangerous’.

Panda defended the decision to publish this

report to DM168 on the grounds that “open debate is a prerequisi­te for science to thrive”.

Other authors published by Panda include Scott Atlas, an expert on magnetic resonance imaging who became one of President Donald Trump’s favourite Covid-19 “experts”. Atlas’s employer, Stanford University, distanced itself from Atlas, writing that “his actions have undermined and threatened public health even as countless lives have been lost to Covid-19”. Atlas encouraged citizens of Michigan to “rise up” against lockdown measures, even after armed militia stormed the Michigan Capitol building.

Panda also hosts a podcast called Pandacast, which has featured as a guest Randy Hillier, a Canadian MP who has formed an anti-lockdown caucus under cover of a Christian political group, and who has attracted controvers­y for refusing to adhere to lockdown measures. Canadian health officials have accused him of repeatedly spreading Covid-19 misinforma­tion.

It has also hosted Dr Wolfgang Wodarg, described by the journal Nature as a “prime mover behind the fake pandemic outcry”; a “self-proclaimed expert in lung disease who left medical practice in 1994” and who has “a history of dubious positionin­g with respect to biotech”.

Wodarg, together with Panda’s scientific advisor Mike Yeadon, filed a petition with the European Medicines Agency on 1 December calling for suspension of pharmaceut­ical companies’ Covid-19 vaccine efforts.

Yeadon is described on the Panda website as believing that the “pandemic was over in the [Northern Hemisphere] summer”.

Panda representa­tives have responded aggressive­ly to criticism while vocally lobbying the South African government to end lockdown. It has also made no secret of its internatio­nal aspiration­s. In a crowdfundi­ng appeal hosted by the website of a related lobby group called Business for Ending Lockdown, the group asks for money to enable “Panda to lead the world against lockdown”.

Panda has repeatedly defended its actions on the grounds that the mainstream media is opposed to any science that is anti-lockdown. But to its critics, Panda is fundamenta­lly unscientif­ic itself – and harmfully muddying the waters on issues critical to preserving public health.

“Nick Hudson and Panda and their supporters have been a blight on public discourse over the past year,” GroundUp editor Nathan Geffen told

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