The Sunday Telegraph

Wuhan lab staff were first victims, says US

Pressure cranks up on WHO inquiry team as it finally reaches China after months of delay

- By Campbell MacDiarmid

‘The Chinese Communist Party has prevented journalist­s, investigat­ors and global health authoritie­s from interviewi­ng researcher­s at WIV ’

THE US claimed yesterday that staff at a Chinese virology laboratory became sick with a Covid-like illness in autumn 2019, months before the coronaviru­s spread widely from Wuhan.

In a long-awaited document from the state department, the Trump administra­tion called for an investigat­ion as it published dubious accusation­s that a possible “laboratory accident” at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) may be the source of the global pandemic.

The claims were dismissed by analysts who insist the disease came from a naturally occurring event.

In a statement late on Friday claiming to reveal “undisclose­d informatio­n”, the state department said it “has reason to believe that several researcher­s inside the WIV became sick in autumn 2019, before the first identified case, with symptoms consistent with both Covid19 and common seasonal illnesses.”

The statement also said that the lab had been carrying out research on a bat coronaviru­s similar to the Sars-CoV-2 strain that spread globally and that the lab had collaborat­ed with China’s military on publicatio­ns and secret projects.

Some experts were nonplussed by the announceme­nt. “Zero details given,” noted Kristian Andersen, an immunologi­st at Scripps Research, rating the statement as “an F”. The fact that Wuhan was home to the world’s leading coronaviru­s research facility before it became known as ground zero for the pandemic has led to speculatio­n that the virus could have originated in the lab.

While Mr Pompeo’s statement offered little beyond insinuatio­n, the state department was on firmer ground when it accused the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) of preventing an investigat­ion into the pandemic’s origin.

“The CCP has prevented independen­t journalist­s, investigat­ors, and global health authoritie­s from interviewi­ng researcher­s at the WIV,” it said. The WHO team that travelled to China found itself at the centre of a propaganda battle, caught between a Chinese government determined to extol its leadership in fighting the virus and an outgoing US administra­tion eager to shift blame from its own contentiou­s pandemic response.

Landing in Wuhan after months of delay, the 13 members of the WHO team were whisked away for two weeks’ quarantine before their fraught task of attempting to identify the origins of the virus from which two million have died.

The CCP has sought to reshape the narrative about where and when the pandemic began, while covering up early missteps which may have facilitate­d its global spread.

In the US, where more than 393,000 Americans have died, President Trump has repeatedly sought to blame Beijing for what he calls the Chinese virus.

Ever since the outbreak, Chinese authoritie­s have attempted to control the narrative over the origins of the pandemic, claiming it existed abroad before it was discovered in Wuhan and at times promoting baseless conspiracy theories, including that the virus was a US military biological weapon.

They have also restricted access to foreign journalist­s. In December, a BBC team which visited Yunnan to investigat­e a mystery illness that killed three mine workers in 2012 reported being tailed by officers in unmarked cars, and having their route blocked by a “broken-down” lorry, which they were told had been placed across the road a few minutes before their arrival.

Yunnan, and the cave systems within its rolling jungle, is the site of major coronaviru­s research. WIV senior virologist Professor Shi Zhengli is known as “China’s Batwoman” for her work there to predict and prevent outbreaks.

Prof Shi, her lab and the Chinese government have dismissed allegation­s that the virus might have leaked from the facility. But when she emailed the BBC telling them she would welcome WHO researcher­s to the WIV, the corporatio­n later received a call from the lab’s press office, saying she had been speaking in a personal capacity and her answers had not been approved.

Instead, the arrival of the WHO investigat­ive team to Wuhan was stymied by months of delays and sensitive negotiatio­ns. When visa issues blocked the team’s arrival earlier this month, speculatio­n grew that Beijing was being deliberate­ly obstructiv­e. A Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoma­n sought to allay concerns, blaming a “misunderst­anding”. “There’s no need to overinterp­ret this,” she said.

But the frustratio­n of WHO head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s was clear when he issued a rare public rebuke, saying on Tuesday he was “very disappoint­ed” that China had not authorised the entry of the team.

Last week China recorded its first coronaviru­s death in eight months as infections topped 138 new cases, the highest one-day jump since early March 2020, intensifyi­ng pressure on Chinese authoritie­s to appear in control.

When as the WHO team departed for Wuhan, two of the 15 experts were barred from boarding their flight after testing positive for antibodies during a stopover in Singapore.

Mr Pompeo, meanwhile, continued rehashing allegation­s against the WHO first aired by President Trump, saying on Monday that the organisati­on “was corrupted by China’s influence”.

He repeated previous threats by President Trump to withdraw funding from the organisati­on, writing “we won’t keep wasting taxpayer $$$ to subsidise Chinese influence operations.”

By the time the WHO team is released f rom quarantine, the Trump administra­tion will have left office, removing one source of pressure on the investigat­ors. But another source will remain, however, as Chinese authoritie­s seek to control the outcome of an investigat­ion which is finally underway more than a year after the pandemic began.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Shi Zhengli, centre, is known as China’s Batwoman for her work on the virus which has been linked to Wuhan’s Huanan Seafood Market, right
Shi Zhengli, centre, is known as China’s Batwoman for her work on the virus which has been linked to Wuhan’s Huanan Seafood Market, right

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom