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China furious as WHO calls for new probe of Wuhan lab-leak theory

Workers in protective suits ride a truck taking medical supplies into a Wuhan hospital at the height of the crisis.<i>Photo: AP</i>

Workers in protective suits ride a truck taking medical supplies into a Wuhan hospital at the height of the crisis.Photo: AP

China has reacted with barely restrained anger to the call by the World Health Organisation for a renewed investigation into the origins of the COVID-19 virus.

Dismissing the theory that the coronavirus pandemic originated as a leak from a Chinese laboratory bio lab in Wuhan, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian denounced such speculation as a politically motivated lie.

Zhao rejected accusations that China had not fully cooperated with investigators, saying it welcomed a science-based probe but rejected any political manipulation.

He also reiterated calls for an investigation into “highly suspicious laboratories such as Fort Detrick and the University of North Carolina” in the United States where China has suggested, without evidence, that the US was developing the coronavirus as a bioweapon.

‘Totally a lie’

“The lab leak theory is totally a lie concocted by anti-China forces for political purposes, which has nothing to do with science,” Zhao said at a daily briefing.

“We always supported and participated in science-based global virus tracing, but we firmly opposed any forms of political manipulation,” he said.

Zhao said China has made major contributions toward virus tracing and insisted it had shared most data and research results.

That “fully reflects China’s open, transparent and responsible attitude, as well as its support for the work of the WHO and the advisory group,” he said.

The missing data

The WHO’s stance in a report released Thursday is a sharp reversal of the UN health agency’s initial assessment of the pandemic’s origins. It comes after many critics accused WHO of being too quick to dismiss or underplay a lab-leak theory that put Chinese officials on the defensive.

Following a tightly controlled visit to China last year, the WHO concluded that it was “extremely unlikely” the coronavirus might have spread to humans from a lab in the city of Wuhan.

However, WHO’s expert group now says “key pieces of data” to explain how the pandemic began were still missing. The scientists said the group would “remain open to any and all scientific evidence that becomes available in the future to allow for comprehensive testing of all reasonable hypotheses.”

Identifying a disease’s source in animals typically takes years. It took more than a decade for scientists to pinpoint the species of bats that were the natural reservoir for SARS, a relative of COVID-19.

WHO’s expert group also noted that since lab accidents in the past have triggered some outbreaks, the highly politicised theory could not be discounted.

-AAP

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