The Mail on Sunday

WILL WE EVER LEARN TRUTH ABOUT CHINA AND THE PANDEMIC?

- By IAN BIRRELL

Two inquiries launched but critics warn they are ‘cloaked in secrecy’

World Health Organisati­on lets Beijing vet the scientists taking part in its probe

And it appoints British scientist with links to Wuhan who led campaign to dismiss lab leak fears as ‘conspiracy’

EXPLOSIVE EMAILS from a group of top-level scientists and Government doctors in the United States reveal one suggested Covid- 19 could have originated from human activities rather than arising naturally from animals. Another asked if it might have been deliberate­ly engineered.

The documents also show that a key letter sent early in the pandemic from America’s top scientists to the White House had a line deleted that suggested the virus could have been ‘an unintentio­nal release from a laboratory’.

These revelation­s come as evidence of China’s cover- up grows, alongside fears the World Health Organisati­on, widely criticised for its failure to challenge Beijing at the start of the pandemic, is letting the regime dictate its inquiry into the origins.

The WHO has all owed China t o vet scientists taking part in the probe, while also appointing to its t en- strong t eam t he British charity chief Peter Daszak whose funding for research on bat viruses in a highsecuri­ty Wuhan laboratory was stopped on safety grounds.

Daszak, president of Eco-Health Alliance, has led efforts that have dismissed concerns over lab leakage as a ‘baseless’ conspiracy theory. Also, to the fury of critics, he is heading a task force on the pandemic’s origins for The Lancet medical journal.

Although it is crucial to find the pandemic’s source in order to help protect against further eruptions, some experts fear that official investigat­ions will sweep aside even the possibilit­y that Sars-Cov-2 – the strain that causes Covid-19 – might be man-made.

‘A lot of time has been lost and there is still no evidence of an effective independen­t investigat­ion starting into the origins of Covid-19,’ said Nikolai Petrovsky, professor of medicine at Flinders University in Australia and a leading vaccine researcher.

DAVID RELMAN, an expert on emerging infectious diseases, has condemned both the WHO and Lancet inquiries for being ‘cloaked in secrecy’ and demanded that conflicts of interest must be ‘addressed’ to ensure credibilit­y. ‘Rather than resorting to hunches and finger-pointing, each scenario must be systematic­ally and objectivel­y analysed using the best available science-based approaches,’ he wrote in the journal of the National Academy of Sciences.

Relman, professor of microbiolo­gy and immunology at California’s Stanford University School of Medicine, also challenged those who deny there could have been a laboratory leak. ‘If Sars-Cov-2 escaped from a lab to cause the pandemic, it will become critical to understand the chain of events and prevent this from happening again,’ he said. Fears that the scientific establishm­ent closed ranks to protect prominent figures have been intensifie­d with the release – via a freedom of informatio­n request – of thousands of revealing emails from Ralph Baric, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of North Carolina.

Baric’s team carried out controvers­ial research with the Wuhan Institute of Virology, creating chimeric viruses ( new hybrid micro-organisms) to test the ability of bat-borne viruses to infect human cells. He has admitted they can be made without any signs of manipulati­on.

The epidemiolo­gist joined discussion­s among a group of experts in Government and universiti es brought together by an official at the US Department of Homeland Security after reports of a strange new respirator­y virus killing people in Wuhan.

The chain of correspond­ence was given the jocular subject tag of

Red Dawn. On February 10 – the day one official wrote that China had stopped including its asymptomat­ic cases in data, thus making it appear to the world that its outbreak was slowing – they were joined by Mark Keim, a former White House adviser on disaster prevention.

He offered the group – which included the senior medical officer in the department’s Countering Weapons of Mass Destructio­n Office–a nine-point list of ‘situationa­l assumption­s’ that began by clearly stating: ‘The novel virus could be anthropoge­nic rather than zoonotic.’

Anthropoge­nic means something that results from human actions. Zoonotic is a disease transmitte­d naturally from animals to humans.

Dr Keim told The Mail on Sunday he wanted fellow experts to keep their minds open, adding: ‘We know that both anthropoge­nic and zoonotic pathogens exist.’ Keim explained that although epidemics tended to be zoonotic, scientists should only eliminate theories based on firm evidence. ‘We have to be careful about making assumption­s that have no proof,’ he said.

On March 5, another participan­t questioned whether evidence in strains of the virus ‘suggested this is engineered’. Baric responded firmly, saying: ‘There is absolutely no evidence that this virus is bio

engineered.’ The new documents out lining this dialogue were obtained by US Right To Know, a public health research body investigat­ing bio-safety.

The group is consulting lawyers because many pages of the emails appear to be redacted and it is also feared thousands more identified in the initial search for documents have not been handed over. ‘We are concerned the Chinese and US Government­s may not tell us the truth about the origins of Sars-Cov-2,’ said executive director Gary Ruskin.

Another set of exchanges centred on the White House’s request in February for the nation’ s top experts at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine to assess the virus origins.

The first draft of the reply said the initial expert view was there was no evidence the disease was engineered. But a footnote asked if a line should be added saying ‘this does not preclude an unintentio­nal release from a laboratory studying the evolution of coronaviru­ses’.

This did not, however, appear in the final letter from the academies. Nor was there any mention of the virus binding sites, which was also asked about in the first draft, after another infectious diseases expert, Trevor Bedford, warned that ‘if you start weighing evidence, there’s a lot to consider from both scenarios’.

Bedford, an expert on the evolution of viruses, explained last week that ‘we could not say definitely whether emergence into human population occurred via zoonosis or lab escape’ but he wanted to rule out any idea sofa deliberate­ly-released bioweapon. ‘I still view zoonosis as the most likely scenario, but I still view this as not definitive,’ he added. Meanwhile, scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology have had to divulge details about bat coronaviru­s samples in their possession, which they have admitted were linked to the deaths in 2012 of three miners from a similar respirator­y disease. Shi Zhengli, a renowned Wuhan-based virologist who has worked closely with Baric and is known as Batwoman for her expedition­s to gather samples in caves, had to clarify a paper in Nature magazine written with two colleagues at the top-security laboratory after inconsiste­ncies were spotted.

This highly-influentia­l paper, sent on the day China belatedly admitted to human transmissi­on, disclosed the existence of a virus called RaTG13 that is the closest known relative to Sars-Cov-2, with more than 96 per cent genetic similarity. It was sampled from a horseshoe bat and stored at their lab.

Other experts questioned why more informatio­n was not shared about this strain. It later emerged the name was changed from another virus identified in a 2016 paper – but, unusually, was not cited and obscured links to the dead miners.

Following complaints, Nature made the Wuhan scientists print an ‘addendum’ confirming the virus was linked to the miners – and that they have eight more bat-borne Sars viruses, collected in the same mine, about 1,000 miles from their city.

Nature said comments had been ‘raised’, leading it to conclude the paper was ‘insufficie­ntly clear’ on some details. ‘The scientific findings described in the original paper are not affected by these clarificat­ions,’ said a spokespers­on.

‘ The addendum contains some important correction­s, but raises more questions than it answers,’ said one Western expert, pointing out the original paper masked any connection to the miners by claiming they died of a fungal infection. ‘Why now the abrupt about-turn, and why when first asked did they deny a viral connection?’

‘If a coronaviru­s scientist discovered a novel strain of virus and had reason to believe it may be connected to human deaths, it is a hard stretch to suggest no attempts would then be taken to recreate the virus to study it further.’

He al s o asked why genetic sequences of the other eight samples at the lab were not being shared. ‘How do we know none of these other viruses were not used as a backbone to create Covid-19? ‘

Prof Relman has also said it was plausible to believe the genetic sequence of Sars-Cov-2 might have been ‘recovered from a bat sample and viable virus resurrecte­d from a synthetic genome to study it before that virus accidental­ly escaped’.

The WHO’s team investigat­ing the pandemic’s origins is expected to travel to China next month, more than a year after the virus emerged in Wuhan. But there are concerns they are relying on Chinese data and have given Beijing the right to vet scientists taking part. However, a WHO spokesman said it is ‘ customary’ for a host nation to agree to any investigat­ory teams deployed in their country. The inclusion of the controvers­ial Briton, Peter Daszak, though, in its team provoked concern among critics, given his strong views and apparent conflicts of interest.

The US government stopped a $3.7 million (£2.8 million) grant to his charity after The Mail on Sunday disclosed it was funding the Wuhan laboratory. The MoS also revealed that the lab’s top safety official admitted last year to biosecurit­y concerns.

A later letter sent by the main US health research funding body asked Daszak’s Eco- Health Alliance why the Wuhan Institute ‘failed to note’ that the bat virus was isolated from a mine where men died ‘with an illness remarkably similar to Covid-19’. The charity, backed by 77 Nobel laureates, complained of having grants ‘inexplicab­ly’ suspended since they were ‘studying the very family of viruses responsibl­e for Covid-19’.

Last month, emails obtained under another freedom of informatio­n request showed Daszak – who is paid $410,000 (£303,000) a year – drafted a statement to The Lancet, then persuaded 26 other prominent scientists to sign it, condemning ‘ conspiracy theories suggesting that Covid-19 does not have a natural origin’.

The signatorie­s include six of the 12 experts appointed to The Lancet Commission’s task force investigat­ing the virus origins, which is headed by Daszak.

Richard Ebright, a biosecurit­y expert and professor of chemical biology at Rutgers University, said Daszak should be disqualifi­ed because of his ties to the Wuhan lab and that his inclusion suggested both inquiries would be ‘ crude whitewashe­s’. But David Nabarro, special envoy to the WHO director

There’s no evidence of an effective independen­t investigat­ion

Plausible to believe that a virus accidental­ly escaped

Virus was already well adapted to human transmissi­on

general on Covid 19, defended the inclusion of a man he described as ‘one of the finest scientists I know’, on the basis of Daszak’s world-beating expertise on bat coronaviru­ses and China. The inquiry’s terms of reference admit that no route of transmissi­on from bats to humans has yet been identified and, intriguing­ly, reveal there were 124 confirmed cases of Covid-19 in China by the end of last year – an increase on the 41 previously identified.

For its part, the Chinese government has been pushing hard the unproven theory that the virus began in another country and the document does not rule out ‘the possibilit­y that the virus may have si l ently circulated elsewhere’ before infecting people in Wuhan.

It does, however, add that the virus has been ‘remarkably stable’ since being first reported in the city and spreading around the world, ‘suggesting that the virus was well adapted to human transmissi­on from the moment it was first detected’.

This claim was first published in a study – revealed by this newspaper in May – that raised questions over how the virus became so adept at infecting humans. It also challenged claims the disease originated in a Wuhan wildlife market, which was ruled out later that month by Beijing.

In the meantime, medical staff who responded to the first outbreak of Covid 19 in Wuhan have been warned they could be charged with espionage – which carries the death penalty – if they reveal details about the disease’s eruption in the city. (Almost every case in China’s courts ends with conviction.)

This is the latest disturbing attempt by Communist Party chiefs to suppress details about the pandemic’s outbreak which was followed by the arrest of doctors who tried to warn local citizens and by outside experts barred from entering China.

This gag is thought to have been imposed about three months ago as President Xi Jinping’s government sought global credit for success in controllin­g infections. ‘The world is already paying the price from China’s cover-up after this problem blew up in a climate of secrecy and now they seem to be making it even worse,’ said Tom Tugendhat, the Tory MP and chair of the Foreign Affairs select committee.

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 ??  ?? SECURITY FEARS: The MoS exposed concerns about the Wuhan lab in investigat­ions into the Covid outbreak, right
SECURITY FEARS: The MoS exposed concerns about the Wuhan lab in investigat­ions into the Covid outbreak, right

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