WHO expert group revealed that three people have ties with Chinese Communist institutions

In the afternoon of February 9, a joint WHO-CCP expert group held a press conference.

The WHO expert group spent only ten days investigating the source of the Epidemic and came up with a preliminary result that was almost consistent with the Chinese Communist Party‘s rhetoric, which was doubly questioned by the outside world. The Australian media disclosed that at least three members of the WHO expert panel were close to official Chinese Communist Party agencies, so the impartiality of the investigation was questioned.

In the afternoon of February 9, the WHO panel held a press conference in Wuhan and announced the preliminary results of the investigation, which were almost consistent with the official propaganda of the Chinese Communist Party.

Peter Ben Embarek, head of the WHO panel, said it was “very unlikely” that the virus had leaked from the laboratory and that it was “very possible” that the virus had been infected through frozen Food.

At a WHO briefing in Geneva, Switzerland, on the afternoon of Feb. 12, panel leader Embarek said the WHO panel went to a laboratory in Wuhan, China, and discussed with staff that the virus had not been “deliberately used” in any laboratory studying coronaviruses.

The WHO panel arrived in Wuhan, China, on Jan. 14 and was quarantined for 14 days before it began investigating the source of the outbreak in the company of Chinese Communist Party officials and experts. The team began its investigation on January 28 and concluded it on February 9, taking just over ten days to hastily conclude its investigation and produce results that have been questioned by outsiders.

On February 14, Sky News reported that at least three members of the WHO panel had close ties to official Chinese Communist Party agencies, including the panel’s leader, Peter Daszak, president of the U.S. nonprofit Ecological health Alliance, and Dutch virologist Marion Koopmans.

Among them, Embarek received the Spirit of Science Award from the Chinese Society for Food Science and Technology and the International Union of Food Science and Technology in 2017.

Daszak has a long-standing relationship with the Wuhan Institute of Virus Research, where he also collaborated with researcher Zhengli Shi on bat coronaviruses and funded the institute’s research on bat coronaviruses.

And Guibermans served as a scientific advisor to the Communist Party’s Guangdong Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, whose biography is still listed on the official website of the Guangdong Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

The report said that the Wuhan Institute of Virus has not yet released its work logs, refusing to disclose details of the first 70 patients infected, and that information about patient zero is also currently blank. …… The CCP viruses (Wuhan virus, New Coronavirus) may have been transmitted to humans through bats or through intermediate hosts, but it is also possible that leaked out of the lab …… “So we need independent investigators with an open mind to find answers, not scientists who are considered by the Chinese (Communist) government to be unproblematic.”

The New York Times reported on Feb. 12 that the Chinese Communist Party refused to hand over vital information during the WHO expert panel’s retrospective trip. The newspaper quoted WHO experts as saying that Chinese authorities refused to provide original information on the earliest cases of the CCP virus in the country; the experts also said the two sides exchanged heated words over the lack of details.

The WHO panel’s preliminary investigation report has also been widely questioned by the U.S., Australia, Britain and other Western societies.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo criticized the WHO for being politicized and bending over backwards to Chinese Communist Party President Xi Jinping. Pompeo said there is significant evidence that the virus originated in a Chinese laboratory.

Pompeo said he still personally believes and has “ample evidence that this (virus) probably came from the (Wuhan Institute of Virus) laboratory.

In addition, a number of U.S. and Australian lawmakers have said that the WHO panel endorsed the Chinese Communist Party. For example, several U.S. senators harshly criticized the WHO as a puppet of the Chinese Communist Party and reiterated that the virus originated in China.

Australian Senator Malcolm Roberts criticized the WHO’s “investigation” into the origin of the virus as a whitewash of the Chinese Communist Party, and he had no confidence in the findings.