Insider: The Chinese Communist Party holds a lot of flu data, refuses to hand over to WHO – Internal documents leak clues related to the source of the virus Shuo, the Chinese Communist Party issued a secret notice at the end of 2019

Medical staff in protective suits perform nucleic acid testing in a small area in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, where the outbreak is most severe, May 15, 2020.

The much-anticipated WHO Wuhan sourcing trip ended with a controversial and vague conclusion and a near change of heart by the WHO director general. According to WHO experts, one of the excuses for the Chinese Communist Party‘s refusal to provide the source data was the lack of early influenza data. However, internal CCP documents obtained indicate that the CCP has a large amount of flu data in hand and its excuse for refusing WHO is a lie.

WHO has provided only limited data on the traceability of the Epidemic

Even the WHO, which has been criticized for currying favor with the CCP, only recently received permission from the CCP to enter Wuhan a year after the outbreak to trace the source of the virus.

A World health Organization (WHO) mission in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, Jan. 30, 2021.

The Wall Street Journal reported on February 12 that a heated debate erupted over the refusal of the Chinese Communist Party to provide raw information on the first patients infected with the disease while the WHO mission was in Wuhan to investigate the source of the outbreak.

The China Daily reported that the Communist Party provided the WHO panel with only a general summary and analysis of the initial cases, as well as retrospective research and assertions that “no evidence of the virus was found” in the months prior to the Wuhan outbreak.

Panel member Dominic Dwyer, an Australian infectious disease expert, said the Chinese Communist Party refused to provide raw data on the 174 early cases of Neocon (CCP) and data on patients with possible pneumonia before December 2019, which led to a heated debate between the WHO panel and the Chinese Communist Party.

This was despite the WHO expert panel’s conclusion on Feb. 9, which favored CCP propaganda. However, after the panel left China, WHO Director General Tan Desai surprisingly did not endorse the panel’s conclusions, saying instead that he did not rule out any hypothesis about the origin of the epidemic.

The WHO experts disclosed that they were still working to try to find alternative sources for the virus, such as analyzing data on respiratory cases, including blood samples, before December 2019. However, the Chinese Communist Party continues to reject WHO’s request to investigate blood samples retroactively. Some WHO experts say a Wuhan blood bank has finally agreed to a possible collaborative study in the future.

According to China Daily, WHO expert De Ville said the CCP only provided flu surveillance data from a children’s hospital and a general hospital; the CCP explained that Chinese hospitals do not usually store physical samples from patients with respiratory illnesses.

However, internal CCP documents obtained show that the CCP in fact has something else to hide regarding the influenza epidemic at the end of 2019.

EXCLUSIVE: The CCP has a lot of flu data in hand and also issued a secret notice at the end of 2019

Exclusive access to some documents from the Communist Party’s Health and Welfare Commission and the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention, including the Monthly Report on Infectious Disease Risk Assessment, shows that infectious diseases such as influenza are monitored throughout China.

Screenshot from the Communist Party’s National Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Monthly Report on Infectious Disease Risk Assessment, Issue 1, 2019

For example, the CDC’s 2019 1st Monthly Report on Risk Assessment of National Public Health Emergencies and Infectious Diseases Requiring Attention disclosed that one of the key concerns for that year was the “significant increase in influenza outbreaks.”

The CDC’s 2019 1st Monthly Report requires localities to “continue to do a good job of monitoring influenza-like cases and pathogenesis in accordance with the requirements of the National Influenza Surveillance Program,” which includes “strengthening the reporting of influenza-like outbreaks and doing a good job of specimen collection and testing.”

Screenshot from the CCP’s National Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s “Daily Intelligence Meeting Minutes” on December 02, 2019 (Epoch Times)

The document “Daily Intelligence Meeting Minutes” of the Communist Party’s National Center for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC), on the other hand, brings together various public health events such as influenza outbreaks in various places, and even a few new cases of influenza in various places are monitored and included.

The Epoch Times also obtained some documents from the CCP’s Hainan Provincial CDC for 2019, which disclose that in November 2019, two new influenza outbreaks were reported in the province.

These documents indicate that the CCP health department implemented comprehensive surveillance of influenza outbreaks, which included the collection and testing of influenza samples, with monthly, weekly, and even daily surveillance reports.

It is worth noting that in November 2019, the CCP Health Committee issued two notifications, one explicit and one implicit, specifically for influenza.

On November 7, 2019, the CPC Health and Wellness Committee issued a notice on the medical treatment of influenza in this winter and spring (original text of the Health and Wellness Committee). This notice was publicly posted on the official website of the Health and Welfare Commission, and it is also the usual practice in previous years.

One thing the Chinese don’t know: on Nov. 25, 2019, the CPC Health and Welfare Commission issued the Notice on Good Medical Service Monitoring for Influenza. Pictured is a screenshot of the secret notice. (Epoch Times)

What the Chinese people do not know is that on November 25, 2019, the Communist Party’s National Health and Welfare Commission issued a secret notice, which is “not for public consumption,” asking local health and welfare commissions to do a better job of monitoring medical services for influenza.

The Epoch Times reporter was unable to find any information about the secret notice in a public Internet search.

Current affairs commentator Li Linyi believes that the November 25, 2019 secret notice proves that the CCP had already learned of the outbreak of the New Crown (CCP virus) at the Time, but did not want the Chinese to know about it, so it secretly monitored the influenza epidemic with similar symptoms.

Public documents prove that Wuhan has flu data and samples

In fact, the “National Influenza Surveillance Program” on the official website of the CCP’s National Center for Disease Control and Prevention (original text on the official website) explicitly requires that “each sentinel hospital collects influenza-like case specimens according to patient visits: 10 to 40 per week in southern provinces, reaching an average of 20 per week throughout the year; 20 per month from April to September in northern provinces, and an average of 20 per week from October to March. “

Screenshot from the 2017 version of the CDC’s National Influenza Surveillance Program (screenshot from the official website of the CDC)

The program requires sentinel hospitals to collect specimens of influenza-like cases and place them in sampling tubes containing 3-4 ml of sampling solution and “transport them to the corresponding influenza surveillance network laboratories within 2 working days.”

According to the 2011 edition of the National Influenza Surveillance Technical Guidelines of the National Influenza Center of the CPC (download from the official website of the CPC), “original specimens with positive virus isolation are stored at -70°C for at least 6 months.”

Before December 2019, according to the notice of the former Ministry of Health (now the “Health and Welfare Commission”) of the CPC on the issuance of the “2009 Program for the Management of Expanded Influenza Surveillance Network Projects” (original text on the official website of the Health and Welfare Commission of the CPC), there are at least 4 influenza sentinel hospitals in Wuhan, namely Wuhan University Central South Hospital, Hubei Provincial Maternal and Child Health Hospital, Wuhan Children’s Hospital, and Wuhan No. 1 Hospital, and 2 influenza surveillance network laboratories, namely Hubei Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention and Wuhan Center for Disease Control and Prevention; and at least 18 sentinel hospitals and 14 influenza surveillance network laboratories in Hubei province.

Both internal and public documents from the CCP indicate that at least 4 sentinel hospitals in Wuhan are monitoring the influenza outbreak in 2019 and that biological samples of influenza patients are collected and sent to the local network laboratory in Wuhan for testing and preservation.

Also according to an Associated Press report last December 30 (original article), the CCP authorities released retrospective testing data from only two Wuhan flu surveillance hospitals in 2020 and included only 520 samples, compared to 330,000 samples collected in China that year; and, as of February 6, 2020, the Hubei Provincial CDC had tested more than a hundred samples in Huanggang, a city southeast of Wuhan, but the results were not made public.

Internal documents leak clues related to the virus Shuo source

The Epoch Times reporter found some factual data related to the source of the new crown (CCP virus) virus, such as a significant increase in influenza cases and a concentrated fever epidemic that failed to identify the cause, in some of the CCP health department’s 2019 documents obtained and not made public.

Screenshot from Meihekou CDC’s Infectious Disease Epidemic Information 2019 Briefing No. 12 (Epoch Times)

Meihekou City, Jilin Province CDC “Infectious Disease Epidemic Information” 2019 Briefing No. 12 shows: [Influenza] 234 cases reported this month, incidence rate 40.70/100,000, up 11,600.00% compared to last month and up 46.25% compared to the same month last year.

December 6, 2019 Beijing Chaoyang District informed the “recent influenza epidemic situation and recommendations for prevention and control”, disclosing that the concentrated fever epidemic “did not detect common respiratory pathogens”. Photo is a screenshot of the document. (Epoch Times)

On December 6, 2019, the Beijing Chaoyang District Public Health Management Committee informed the recent influenza epidemic situation and recommendations for prevention and control. The document disclosed that the recent influenza activity in Chaoyang District has increased, and that between September 1, 2019 and December 5, 2019, there were four concentrated fever outbreaks, one of which was an adenovirus outbreak, one caused by parainfluenza, and the other two “no common respiratory pathogens were detected.

In February 2020, Xi visited the epidemic prevention work in Chaoyang District, which has seen several outbreaks in the past year.

The Chinese Communist Party has traceability data on the outbreak but refuses to release it

An earlier exclusive report by the Epoch Times, “CCP Refuses to Disclose Virus Traceability Clues in Its Hands” (original report), revealed that the CCP had clues to the traceability of the virus but had refused to disclose them.

Confidential Chinese Communist Party epidemic prevention documents reveal that the CCP has been conducting internal virus tracing since late 2019.

In February 2020, the General Office of the CCP’s National Health Commission issued a letter to localities on requesting cooperation in wildlife traceability.

On February 26, 2020, the CCP’s Hebei Provincial Health Commission forwarded the National Health Commission’s “Letter on Requesting Cooperation in Wildlife Traceability Work” to provincial and municipal health departments, which required local forestry and agricultural departments to be responsible for epidemiological investigation of wildlife, as well as sampling and testing of environmental and animal samples.

In the official letter, the National Health Commission requested the provincial and municipal health commission to send the blood samples collected from the close contacts to the local provincial CDC for proper storage, pending the next notification for antibody testing; other environmental and animal samples for nucleic acid testing, the results will be promptly fed back to the local public security departments.

Both the forwarding notice and the official letter from the Health and Welfare Commission on wildlife traceability were noted as “not for public consumption”.

In December 2019, the CPC Wuhan City and the National Health Commission, have repeatedly investigated and sampled the Wuhan South China Seafood Market. Since then, the CCP has only released the results of the positive environmental samples from the South China Seafood Market, and has not released other information that could help trace the virus, including the secret documents obtained.

As of February 18 of this year, excluding the controversial Chinese outbreak data released by the Chinese Communist Party, there were more than 109 million cases of the New Guinea virus worldwide, with more than 2.43 million deaths. The international community and the medical community believe that earlier notification of the outbreak or its source could have significantly saved lives and losses.