COVID-19: WHO Scientists To Visit China

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A ten-person delegate of the World Health Organization scientists will be visiting China beginning from Thursday to commence an investigation into the origins of the Coronavirus, authorities stated Monday.

This is coming more than a year since the pandemic hit and amid accusations that China is has made attempts to hinder the investigation.

The long-awaited mission is of great political significance at a time when the coronavirus pandemic has devastated the world, caused almost two million deaths, and brought the global economy to a virtual standstill.

The WHO team “will conduct joint research cooperation on the origins of Covid-19 with Chinese scientists”, the National Health Commission said in a statement that provided no further details.

A last-minute delay to the mission earlier this month earned China a rare rebuke from the head of the WHO.

Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was “very disappointed” China had not authorised the team’s entry — especially as two members were already en route.

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Beijing sought to downplay the tension, however, with foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying calling it a “misunderstanding”.

The WHO experts will have to quarantine for two weeks on arrival but are expected later to visit Wuhan — the city where the deadly virus was first detected in late 2019.

Virus origins

The US and Australia have headed international calls for an independent inquiry into the origins of the virus, placing China under significant pressure amid increasing calls for accountability.

Beijing has faced international criticism over its lack of transparency during the initial outbreak, although domestically the government has praised its own handling of the outbreak and stifled any criticism.

Government officials have repeatedly said that tracing the origins of the pandemic was a “scientific matter”, and has even pushed theories it originated outside China.

Experts say solving the mystery of how it first jumped from animals to humans is crucial to preventing another pandemic, but China’s tight control of its scientific research leaves little hope of finding definitive conclusions.

There is little dispute that the virus emerged in late 2019 at a wet market in Wuhan where wildlife was sold as food, and the pathogen is believed to have originated in an undetermined bat species.

Efforts to find out the origin of the coronavirus have been bedeviled by conspiracy theories — amplified by US President Donald Trump — that it leaked from a Wuhan virology lab.

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