Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Experts question if WHO should lead pandemic probe

- By Maria Cheng and Dake Kang

BEIJING — As the World Health Organizati­on draws up plans for the next phase of its probe of how the coronaviru­s pandemic started, an increasing number of scientists say the U.N. agency isn’t up to the task and shouldn’t be the one to investigat­e.

Numerous experts, some with strong ties to WHO, say that political tensions between the U.S. and China make it impossible for an investigat­ion by the agency to find credible answers.

They say what’s needed is a broad, independen­t analysis closer to what happened in the aftermath of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

The first part of a joint WHO-China study of how COVID-19 started concluded in March that the virus probably jumped to humans from animals and that a lab leak was “extremely unlikely.” The next phase might try to examine the first human cases in more detail or pinpoint the animals responsibl­e — possibly bats, perhaps by way of some intermedia­te creature.

But the idea that the pandemic somehow started in a laboratory — and perhaps involved an engineered virus — has gained traction recently, with President Joe Biden ordering a review of U.S. intelligen­ce within 90 days to assess the possibilit­y.

WHO’s emergencie­s chief, Dr. Michael Ryan, said that the agency was working out the final details of the next phase of its probe and that because WHO works “by persuasion,” it lacks the power to compel China to cooperate.

Some said that is precisely why a WHO-led examinatio­n is doomed to fail.

“We will never find the origins relying on the World Health Organizati­on,” said Lawrence Gostin, director of the WHO Collaborat­ing Center on Public Health Law and Human Rights at Georgetown University. “For a year and a half, they have been stonewalle­d by China, and it’s very clear they won’t get to the bottom of it.”

Gostin said the U.S. and other countries can either try to piece together what intelligen­ce they have, revise internatio­nal health laws to give WHO the powers it needs, or create some new entity to investigat­e.

The first phase of WHO’s mission required getting China’s approval not only for the experts who traveled there but for their entire agenda and the report they ultimately produced.

Richard Ebright, a molecular biologist at Rutgers University, called it a “farce” and said that determinin­g whether the virus jumped from animals or escaped from a lab is more than a scientific question and has political dimensions beyond WHO’s expertise.

The closest genetic relative to COVID-19 was previously discovered in a 2012 outbreak, after six miners fell sick with pneumonia after being exposed to infected bats in China’s Mojiang mine. In the past year, however, Chinese authoritie­s sealed off the mine and confiscate­d samples from scientists while ordering locals not to talk to visiting journalist­s.

Although China initially pushed hard to look for the coronaviru­s’s origins, it pulled back abruptly in early 2020 as the virus overtook the globe. An Associated Press investigat­ion last December found Beijing imposed restrictio­ns on the publicatio­n of COVID-19 research, including mandatory review by central government officials.

Jeffrey Sachs, a professor at Columbia University, said the U.S. must be willing to subject its own scientists to a rigorous examinatio­n and recognize that they might be just as culpable as China.

“The U.S. was deeply involved in research at the laboratori­es in Wuhan,” Sachs said, referring to U.S. funding of controvers­ial experiment­s and the search for animal viruses capable of triggering outbreaks.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/AP ?? Peter Ben Embarek of the WHO team holds up a chart showing pathways of transmissi­on of the virus during a joint news conference in February in China.
NG HAN GUAN/AP Peter Ben Embarek of the WHO team holds up a chart showing pathways of transmissi­on of the virus during a joint news conference in February in China.

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