Houston Chronicle

No proof that virus isa5G cover-up

- By Tom Kertscher POLITIFACT

The claim: “Coronaviru­s Hoax: Fake Virus Pandemic Fabricated to Cover-Up Global Outbreak of 5G Syndrome.” — headline on an article being widely shared on Facebook.

PolitiFact ruling: False. World experts say the virus originated in an animal — perhaps a bat that transmitte­d the virus to another animal and then to humans.

Discussion: Tentacles of lightning illuminate a stormy sky. Three people wear medical face masks, worry visible in their eyes. Next to those two images is one more that reads simply “5G” — a reference to the fifth generation of wireless networking technology.

The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed.

Strike this claim from your list of things to worry about:

This is just one more coronaviru­s assertion without evidence. As has been widely reported, the best available informatio­n is that this virus started with an animal.

The article appears on the Millennium Report, an anti-5G website that includes a section on the rollout of 5G — which “greatly endangers” the health of “every person in the USA.”

The article cites no verifiable evidence of this claim. Instead, it alleges that the coronaviru­s discovered in Wuhan, China, was “staged to cover up the public health crisis caused by the intensive 5G rollout in Wuhan in 2019.” It attributes the informatio­n to an unnamed “intelligen­ce analyst and former U.S. Army officer.”

5G is the latest upgrade to wireless systems that deliver data to mobile phones and other devices. As in, faster, faster, faster. It involves the federal government selling wireless spectrum used for the technology and more cell towers being located in populated rather than rural areas.

Is there reason to worry about possible health effects? Perhaps.

Joel Moskowitz, director of the Center for Family and Community Health in the School of Public Health at the University of California, Berkeley, supports a moratorium on 5G developmen­t. He wrote in Scientific American that there could be health effects and that research needs to be funded.

But other reports say fears are overblown, and there is no evidence that the coronaviru­s has anything to do with wireless technology.

The current coronaviru­s, which causes the respirator­y disease known as COVID-19, “is a zoonotic virus.” That is, it was spread from animals to humans, according to a report from 25 internatio­nal experts, including some from China and the U.S., convened by the World Health Organizati­on.

Bats “appear to be the reservoir of COVID-19 virus,” but the intermedia­te host or hosts — that is, how it went from bats to humans — has not been identified.

Such viruses often originate in bats, although they sometimes can jump to another species before infecting humans. Chinese researcher­s have found a possible link between COVID-19 and pangolins, a mammal entirely covered in scales.

Early on, many of the patients in Wuhan had some link to a large seafood and live animal market, suggesting animal-to-person spread, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Later, a growing number of patients reportedly did not have exposure to animal markets, indicating person-to-person spread.

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