G7 summit to be held on Friday British Prime Minister calls for finding out the source of the virus.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he will call on the international community to find out the exact source of the Chinese Communist Party virus (Wuhan pneumonia) at the G7 leaders’ summit to be held online on Friday (Feb. 19).
Johnson supported the Biden administration’s demand that Beijing produce raw data on the Chinese Communist Party. World health Organization investigators reportedly spent four weeks in Wuhan researching the source of the CCP virus, but Beijing did not provide them with the raw data they wanted.
The White House said Feb. 13 that the U.S. is “deeply concerned” about the WHO report on the virus and called on the Chinese to release data from the early stages of the outbreak. British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab expressed similar concerns to those of the United States in a Feb. 14 interview with the BBC.
WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic recently acknowledged in response to an emailed inquiry from Fox News that “it is international practice to share data for the purpose of virus analysis.”
He said the raw data was provided by the Chinese but could only be used for “certain research,” but went on to say that they would discuss with the Chinese whether it could be used for other aspects of the research, but that doing so was not possible at this Time.
Johnson said Monday (Feb. 15) that world powers should sign a global treaty on pandemics to ensure proper transparency in the wake of the outbreak of a new coronavirus that originated in China (the Chinese Communist virus).
Asked by Reuters who was responsible for the lack of transparency regarding the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic, Johnson said, “I think it’s fairly obvious that most of the evidence looks like it suggests that the disease originated in Wuhan.”
“So all of us need to know as much as we can about how this (disease Epidemic) occurred and the questions that people are asking about human and animal infectious diseases. I think we need as much data as we can get.” He said.
Recently, WHO experts gradually revealed that the Chinese side refused to provide the WHO expert panel with data on early patients and the outbreak in Wuhan, and the two sides had several heated arguments. Experts say the Chinese side’s refusal to provide early outbreak information has made it difficult for WHO experts to find clues that could help prevent another outbreak of a similarly dangerous virus in the future.
Jasarevic admitted to Fox News that the WHO investigation team did have heated and challenging conversations with the Chinese side at some points while in China.
As for the actual source of the CCP virus, WHO admitted to Fox News that the disease may have been spread through “frozen foods. This has been a theory pushed by the Chinese Communist government in an attempt to support the argument that the Communist virus began outside of China and was imported into the country. When the WHO’s international investigation team concluded its research, the Communist Party media strongly promoted the WHO’s statement.
On February 9, the WHO issued a statement saying that the COVID-19 pandemic could not have started with a leak at the Wuhan laboratory (Wuhan Institute of Virus) and downplayed the possibility of further research, and on February 11, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus changed his tune and said that all hypotheses about the origin of the virus were still under consideration.
On January 15, the State Department released a fact check on the actions of the Wuhan Institute of Virus Research, highlighting three actions at the institute related to the origin of the virus that require further review and warrant further investigation.
Recent Comments