Chinese Communist Party police outside Hankou train station before the resumption of train services in Wuhan, April 8, 2020.
On the eve of the World health Organization sending experts to Wuhan, Hubei, next January to investigate, a BBC reporter went ahead to an abandoned copper mine in Yunnan, the very site where miners contracted the coronavirus RaTG13 eight years ago. But the two scheduled trips of the BBC journalists all fell through. They encountered various roadblocks, unidentified vehicles following them and large trucks straddling the road, which forced the journalists to abandon their trip and leave.
BBC 22 reported that its China correspondent John Sudworth and his team drove to an abandoned mine in Yunnan province recently, but they were spied on by plainclothes police and officials in unmarked vehicles on a narrow, rugged road, and later found a truck that appeared to have broken down in the middle of the road minutes before they arrived.
Sha Lei has worked for the BBC for many years and is fluent in Chinese. Sha Lei has done several reports on the Communist virus outbreak this year, and went to the mine in Yunnan because it may have been linked to the original source of the virus.
The New York Post reported on August 15 that virologist Jonathan Latham and molecular biologist Allison Wilson of a nonprofit bioscience resource program in Ithaca, N.Y., studied a 66-page paper written by a Chinese doctor, Li Xu. Xu, a Chinese doctor, wrote a 66-page paper. In the paper, Li Xu reveals that in April 2012, six miners at a mine in Mojiang, Yunnan Province, China, developed severe pneumonia after cleaning bat excrement from the mine, and three of them died quickly.
Li Xu, the doctor who treated the six miners, wrote in his paper that the miners were infected with a new coronavirus that had not been detected in the past. And the patients developed high fevers, dry coughs, aching limbs and headaches …… All of these symptoms are now consistent with those of patients with COVID-19. And the way the patients are treated, such as ventilation and the use of various medications including steroids, blood thinners and antibiotics, is similar to the way COVID-19 patients are treated globally. Notably, Li Xu also specifically “consulted” with Terminal Mountain on the matter, and sent a sample of the virus to the Wuhan Institute of Virus Research.
In February, Wuhan Institute of Virus Research virus expert Shi Zhengli published a report in a foreign medical journal claiming that the COVID-19 that caused the outbreak was 96.2 percent similar to the “RaTG13” virus sample found in Yunnan by the institute. The Sunday Times reported that the “RaTG13” sample mentioned in Shi Zhengli’s report was almost certainly the “RaBtCov/4991” coronavirus collected from the abandoned mine in Yunnan.
Because of this, Sha Lei’s team wanted to find out what the cave was like in the field, where many bats were roosting. However, the visit of Sha Lei’s team did not go well.
As seen in the video taken by Sha Lei, he would inexplicably encounter roadblocks on the way to his car, some police cars were parked on the roadside, and the police were always watching Sha Lei’s car.
When the team’s trip was blocked, Sha Lei decided to change his route to another important base where Shi Zhengli had researched SARS 10 years ago, but encountered the same situation again on the way. The team was followed by several cars, road closures, diversion signs, and another broken down vehicle. After being stranded in a field for over an hour, the team eventually drove off because they could not move forward.
After seeing a large truck parked across the entire road, Sha Lei reluctantly got out and told the camera that the team could not get through. The villagers and he said that the big truck was stopped just a few minutes ago.
The trip was a bust, and Sha Lei and his team had to end the interview and take a flight out.
The WHO expert group will soon go to Wuhan Chinese Communist Party wrote the script in advance?
The World Health Organization recently announced that it would send a team of experts to Wuhan, China, to investigate the source of the Chinese Communist virus, scheduled for January next year. Although there have been doubts about the effectiveness of this investigation, at least this time the experts will be able to step inside the gates of Wuhan. It has been one year since the first case of the CCP virus broke out in Wuhan last year, and the authorities ordered the dismantling of the South China Seafood Market in Wuhan, where the outbreak first occurred, in March this year, which is also known by the public as the “destruction of the corpse”. Even so, several WHO experts were not allowed to go to Wuhan when they entered China to investigate the virus in July this year, and returned home after a three-week stay in Beijing, without submitting any valuable investigation reports. Therefore, many observers believe that Beijing’s agreement to the expert group entering Wuhan this time is not excluded as a deliberate arrangement by the Chinese Communist Party, “The authorities have already written the script and the experts are cooperating to play it out and continue to deceive the international community.”
Radio Free Asia has also cited internal documents and interviews with a large number of diplomats and scientists to reveal that the WHO has made a series of concessions to the CCP in order to gain access to China for investigation, including agreeing to let Chinese scientists lead key parts of the investigation, etc.
This suggests that the WHO’s efforts to trace the virus in China are a “political show” and a public relations effort to reduce the accusations against the organization, which in fact has no interest in the investigation, according to commentator Henghe.
Sha Lei also asked Shi Zhengli via email earlier about her position on the visit of the WHO experts. Shi replied, “On the basis of openness, transparency and mutual trust, I personally welcome them to visit the institute in any form, but the exact itinerary is not up to me.” Shortly afterwards, Sha Lei received a phone call from the institute, saying that Shi’s statement did not represent the institute’s position and asking the BBC team to provide the interview in advance for review, but the BBC refused.
In his report, Sha Lei wrote: “WHO has promised to conduct an investigation into the origins of the outbreak with an open mind, but the Chinese government is apparently unwilling to cooperate in answering questions, at least with media reporters.”
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