WHO chief says it was premature to rule out COVID lab leak
Berlin: The head of the World Health Organisation has acknowledged it was premature to rule out a potential link between the COVID-19 pandemic and a laboratory leak, and says he is asking China to be more transparent as scientists search for the origins of the coronavirus.
In a rare departure from his usual deference to powerful member countries, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Thursday said getting access to raw data had been a challenge for the international team that travelled to China earlier this year to investigate the source of COVID-19. The first human cases were identified in the Chinese city of Wuhan.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was asking China âto be transparentâ.Credit:AP
Tedros told reporters that the UN health agency based in Geneva is âasking actually China to be transparent, open and co-operate, especially on the information, raw data that we asked for at the early days of the pandemicâ.
He said there had been a âpremature pushâ to rule out the theory that the virus might have escaped from a Chinese government lab in Wuhan â" undermining WHOâs own March report, which concluded that a laboratory leak was âextremely unlikelyâ.
âI was a lab technician myself, Iâm an immunologist, and I have worked in the lab, and lab accidents happen,â Tedros said. âItâs common.â
In recent months, the idea that the pandemic started somehow in a laboratory â" and perhaps involved an engineered virus â" has gained traction, especially with US President Joe Biden ordering a review of US intelligence to assess the possibility in May.
China has struck back aggressively, arguing that attempts to link the origins of COVID-19 to a lab were politically motivated and suggesting that the virus might have started abroad. At WHOâs annual meeting of health ministers this year, China said that the future search for COVID-19âs origins should continue â" in other countries.
A security person moves journalists away from the Wuhan Institute of Virology in February after a World Health Organisation team arrived for a field visit in Wuhan in Chinaâs Hubei province. Credit:AP
Most scientists suspect that the coronavirus originated in bats, but the exact route by which it first jumped into people â" via an intermediary animal or in some other way â" has not yet been determined. It typically takes decades to narrow down the natural source of an animal virus like Ebola or SARS.
Tedros said that âchecking what happened, especially in our labs, is importantâ to nailing down if the pandemic had any laboratory links.
âWe need information, direct information on what the situation of this lab was before and at the start of the pandemic,â the WHO chief said, adding that Chinaâs co-operation was critical. âIf we get full information, we can exclude (the lab connection).â
Throughout the pandemic, Tedros has repeatedly praised China for its speed and transparency despite senior WHO officials internally griping about obfuscation from their Chinese counterparts.
Last year, The Associated Press found that WHO was frustrated by a lack of details from China during the early stages of the coronavirusâ spread and showed that China was clamping down on the hidden hunt for the pandemicâs origins.
Numerous public health experts have also called for an independent examination of COVID-19âs origins, arguing WHO does not have the political clout to conduct such a forensic analysis and that the UN agency has failed after more than a year to extract critical details from China.
Jamie Metzl, who has led a group of scientists calling for a broader origins investigation, welcomed Tedrosâ comments but said it was âdeeply unfortunate and dangerousâ that there were no current plans for a probe led by experts beyond the UN health agency.
âEveryone on earth should be demanding that international investigators have the type of full access to all relevant records, samples, and personnel in China which the Chinese government has so far blocked,â said Metzl, who also sits on a WHO genome editing advisory group.
Any WHO-led mission to China also requires government approval for all experts who travel to the country, as well as permission to visit field sites and final approval on any trip report. WHO emergencies chief Dr Michael Ryan has previously said the agency works by consensus and cannot compel countries to co-operate.
Tedrosâ appeal for transparency was echoed by German Health Minister Jens Spahn, who urged Chinese officials to allow the investigation into the origins of the virus to proceed.
âWe do appreciate the co-operation of the Chinese government so far for the first mission,â Spahn said. âBut thatâs not yet enough.â
AP
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