From the BBC:
“Covid-19
pandemic: China 'refused to give data' to WHO team”
China refused
to hand over key data to the World Health Organization (WHO) team investigating
the origins of Covid-19, one of its members has said. Microbiologist Dominic Dwyer
told Reuters, the Wall St Journal and the New York Times the team requested raw
patient data from early cases, what he called "standard practice". He
said they only received a summary. China has not responded to the allegation
but has previously insisted it was transparent with the WHO. The US has urged
China to make available data from the earliest stages of the outbreak, saying
it has "deep concerns" about the WHO report. Last week, the WHO team
concluded it was "extremely unlikely" that the coronavirus leaked
from a lab in the city of Wuhan, dismissing a controversial theory that emerged
last year. Wuhan was the first place in the world where the virus was detected,
in late 2019. Since then, more than 106 million cases and 2.3 million deaths
have been reported worldwide.
What did the
WHO team want to see? The investigators had asked for raw data on the 174
identified cases of Covid-19 from Wuhan in December 2019, Professor Dwyer told
Reuters. Only half of the early cases had been exposed to the seafood
market where the virus was initially detected. "That's why we've
persisted to ask for that," Prof Dwyer said. "Why that doesn't
happen, I couldn't comment. Whether it's political or time or it's difficult...
But whether there are any other reasons why the data isn't available, I don't know.
One would only speculate." Thea Kolsen Fischer, a Danish
immunologist who was also part of the WHO team, told the New York Times that
she saw the investigation as "highly geopolitical". "Everybody
knows how much pressure there is on China to be open to an investigation and
also how much blame there might be associated with this," she said. Prof
Dwyer said the restrictions on data would be mentioned in the WHO team's final
report, which could be released as early as next week. The team arrived
in early January and spent four weeks in China - the first two in hotel
quarantine.
What has
been the response from the Chinese? Beijing has insisted it was transparent
with the WHO investigators, whose visit began only after months of
negotiations. The experts were closely monitored by the Chinese authorities.
The US accused China of hiding the extent of the initial outbreak and
criticised the terms of the visit, which restricted the freedom of the WHO team
to travel and interview witnesses, including community members, on health
grounds. The investigators told the New York Times that disagreements,
including over access to patient records, were so tense that they sometimes
erupted into shouting matches. Last month, an interim report from the
WHO criticised China's initial response, saying that "public health
measures could have been applied more forcefully". The WHO team has
also called for further investigation into the possibility of "cold
chain" transmission, referring to the theory the virus could have spread
through the transport and trade of frozen food. Dr Peter Daszak, a
member of the WHO team, said the focus on where the origins that led to
Covid-19 might be, could be shifted to South East Asia.
^ No one should
be surprised that the Chinese refuse to give the WHO and the world the truth
about Covid-19. China is a Communist Dictatorship and is great at censoring
anything and anyone they want to. The Chinese don’t want the truth of how many
Chinese are/were infected, how many Chinese died or how poorly the Chinese Government
dealt with (or didn’t deal with) containing Covid. The fact is the Chinese hid,
and continue to hide, the realities of Covid. They want to be seen as the saviors
of Covid (bringing their Chinese Covid Vaccine) and not the reason Covid has
spread and killed so many people around the world. The WHO and the whole world
needs to force China to admit the full truth so that we can understand what
happened and try to prevent another pandemic in the future. ^
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