The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Boris told to lead world in banning research that could have caused Covid

Top Tory backs eminent scientist’s plea in MoS

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL EDITOR

CONTROVERS­IAL genetic research which is suspected to have created the Covid virus should be banned under the equivalent of nuclear test treaties, a leading Tory MP has demanded.

Tom Tugendhat, the chairman of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, spoke out amid growing concern in the internatio­nal scientific community about ‘Gain of Function’ experiment­s, which aim to make animal viruses more transmissi­ble, and able to infect humans.

Documents leaked last month confirmed revelation­s published by The Mail on Sunday over the past 18 months about the secret – and risky – work being carried out by Chinese scientists in Wuhan, where the coronaviru­s outbreak first took hold in late 2019.

Details of a grant applicatio­n submitted to the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency showed that scientists in America and at the Wuhan Institute of Virology requested funding to create entirely new coronaviru­ses that did not exist in nature by combining the genetic code of closely related strains. The Wuhan site was one of just five laboratori­es in the world carrying out this Gain of Function research.

Now one of the world’s most eminent academics has added his powerful voice to concerns. Simon Wain-Hobson, Emeritus Professor at the Pasteur Institute, Paris, and a pioneer of HIV research, is also calling for a treaty banning such experiment­s.

He says the pandemic has ‘shed alarming new light’ on Gain of Function research which ‘conjures up shades of the early days of the AIDS epidemic and takes me back to the origins of its virus, HIV-1’.

Writing in today’s Mail on Sunday, Prof Wain-Hobson says that when scientists started to carry out the work, he was ‘among those wondering what would happen if there was a lab accident and a researcher became infected with such a virus, against which we had no immunity, and then they inadverten­tly walked it out of the lab’.

Mr Tugendhat, who has repeatedly called for more transparen­cy from China over the origins of the pandemic, said: ‘Decades ago nuclear test ban treaties were negotiated to keep us safe.

‘Today we need an agreement to ban virus-testing in anywhere but the most secure medical institutio­ns. This is a risk to us all and we need the right to check each other just as the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency checks all nuclear powers.’

The Mail on Sunday was the first mainstream media outlet in the world to report, on April 5 last year, that members of the internatio­nal intelligen­ce community feared the virus had leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

We followed up with a string of further disclosure­s, including the revelation that the institute had been researchin­g bats from the caves scientists believe were the original source of the virus, with the help of a $3.7million (£2.7million) grant from the US government.

President Donald Trump cancelled the funding as a result of our story. His successor, Joe Biden, ordered a report into Covid’s origins in August, which found that US intelligen­ce agencies were divided over whether the lab was responsibl­e.

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