WHO says search for COVID-19 origins ongoing as U.S. lab leak report causes stir – National | 24CA News
The World Health Organization (WHO) remains to be working to establish the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic, its director normal stated on Friday, after a U.S. company was reported to have assessed the pandemic had doubtless been attributable to a Chinese laboratory leak.
“I have written to and spoken with high-level Chinese leaders on multiple occasions as recently as just a few weeks ago… all hypotheses on the origins of the virus remain on the table,” stated WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday that the U.S. Energy Department had concluded the pandemic doubtless arose from a Chinese laboratory leak, an evaluation Beijing denies.
“I wish to be very clear that WHO has not abandoned any plans to identify the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic,” Tedros stated.
The U.S. Energy Department made its judgment with “low confidence” in a categorized intelligence report lately supplied to the White House and key members of Congress, the Journal stated, citing individuals who had learn the intelligence report.
Four different U.S. companies, together with a nationwide intelligence panel, nonetheless suppose COVID-19 was doubtless the results of pure transmission, whereas two are undecided, the Journal reported.
Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19, expressed frustration on Twitter on Thursday that the United States had not shared further info with the WHO on its reviews assessing the origin of the virus.
On Friday, she urged international locations, establishments and analysis teams which may have any info on the origins of the pandemic to share it with the worldwide neighborhood.
“We don’t completely have the answers to how this pandemic began and it remains absolutely critical that we continue to focus on this,” she stated.
She stated it was essential to check coronaviruses circulating in animals and the way individuals come into contact with these animals.
“Our work continues on this space: looking at studies in humans, looking at studies in animals, looking at studies at the animal human interface, and also looking at potential breaches in biosafety and biosecurity for any of the labs that were working with coronaviruses, particularly where the first cases were detected in Wuhan, China, or elsewhere,” she stated.
— Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber in Geneva, Bhanvi Satija and Sriparna Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne
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