British media undercover investigation: Wuhan doctors were asked by the government to conceal the epidemic

A British independent television documentary reveals that Wuhan doctors confessed to being asked by the government to conceal the Communist virus outbreak. Pictured is the south wing of the Jinyintan Hospital in Wuhan on Jan. 10, 2020.

The documentary, produced by Britain’s Independent Television (ITV), shows doctors in Wuhan, Hubei, China, telling the film’s undercover citizen journalists that they knew the Communist virus (Wuhan pneumonia) was human-to-human and quite dangerous at the beginning of the outbreak, but were ordered by the government to keep it quiet.

In the documentary Outbreak: The Virus That Shook The World, which aired on Jan. 19, Wuhan doctors who witnessed the initial cases confessed to a citizen journalist filmed undercover that they knew about the danger of the CCP virus as early as December 2019 and that that people had already passed away from the virus.

One doctor said, “In fact, in late December or early January, a relative I knew died of this virus. Many people who lived with him also contracted it, including some people I know.”

Another said, “We all feel there should be no doubt about human-to-human transmission.”

These doctors revealed these things after the lifting of the ban on the city of Wuhan. They also mentioned that the Communist authorities had tried to cover up the outbreak from its inception.

One doctor said, “We knew the virus was human-to-human, but when we met at the hospital, we were asked not to disclose it to the public. Provincial leaders told the hospital not to tell the truth.”

Doctors in Wuhan revealed that provincial leaders asked them to conceal the outbreak.

They said authorities knew that the January New Year celebrations would “accelerate the spread of the virus,” but the events were held anyway because they presented a “harmonious” and “prosperous” society.

The documentary reveals that while the highly contagious virus spread between January 5 and 17, Chinese Communist Party officials did not announce any new cases during those 12 days.

The testimony of these Wuhan doctors was endorsed by Luo Yijun, a virologist and deputy director of the Taiwan Ministry of health and Welfare’s Disease Control Administration. He believes that the CCP’s initial management of the outbreak was a mess and a failure.

He said, “I think the epidemic could have been avoided if the CCP had been transparent about the outbreak at the beginning and provided the necessary information to the world quickly.”

CDC epidemiologist Yinqing Zhuang also spoke of how he and his colleagues were allowed to travel to Wuhan to investigate whether the CCP virus could be transmitted from person to person, but had trouble finding answers. It was only during one meeting that they learned the truth.

Zhuang Yinqing said they asked many questions during the meeting, and the other side eventually answered reluctantly, “Limited human-to-human transmission cannot be ruled out.”

But two weeks after the outbreak officially began, the CCP still had not publicly acknowledged the possibility of human-to-human transmission.

He asked, “Why didn’t the CCP inform other countries about this human-to-human transmission thing earlier?”