Yan Limeng, a viral researcher in mainland China who has moved to the United States after working as a researcher at the School of Public Health at the University of Hong Kong, has in recent months publicly accused the Chinese government of concealing a new coronavirus epidemic. She said in an interview with Fox News on Tuesday that her 63-year-old mother, who lives in mainland China, has been arrested for the fourth time in connection with the case and is being held in Beijing.
If I tell the truth in Hong Kong, as soon as I open my mouth, I will be disappeared and killed, and no one will be able to hear me anymore,” Yan said in the interview. (If I tell it in Hong Kong, the moment I start to tell it, I will be disappeared and killed.
The new coronavirus epidemic in the United States seems to be intensifying, including President Trump and the first lady, a number of White House officials have been hit, nine areas of New York City and a number of cities in California need to re-implement strict anti-epidemic measures. The “Chinese virus,” as Trump calls it, has become a key word in the heated campaign.
This is Yan Limeng’s second interview with Fox News. In an interview with the station’s news program Tucker Carlson Tonight, she pointed out that her mother had been detained by the Chinese Communist Party, and Yan described the Chinese Communist Party’s tactics as “they are very hungry”.
Yan said that she would reveal more evidence that the virus was caused by China, adding, “This is not the first time my mother and my family have been arrested (by the CCP). I have cut direct ties with most of my family, but my 63-year-old mother has been arrested for the fourth time by the Chinese Communist Party,”
The only reason they arrested my mother and sent her to Beijing was because they were angry that I had told the truth about the virus,” Yan said. The only reason they arrested my mother and sent her to Beijing was because they were angry with me for telling the truth about the virus. They did it to silence me.”
In an interview with Fox News in July this year, Yan said she reported to her boss at the University of Hong Kong late last year that the Chinese government knew the novel coronavirus could be transmitted from human to human, but was asked to keep quiet and not to touch the red line. She claimed that she felt her life was in danger and went to the United States on April 28 this year. However, HKU issued a statement later saying that her opinions and views did not represent those of the University of Hong Kong, and that the report was inconsistent with key facts.
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