China pushes back against calls for COVID-19 transparency
China is responding to increasing criticism from abroad for its lack of transparency about the early days of the COVID-19 epidemic. Political leaders in Australia, Britain, France, Germany, and the United Statesย are calling for investigations or greater transparency from Beijing about the origins of the virus. The calls are especially loud in the U.S. โ the state of Missouri filed a lawsuit in federal court that blasts China for an โappalling campaign of deceit,โ per Bloombergย (porous paywall).
Cuฤซ Tiฤnkวi ๅดๅคฉๅฏ, the Chinese ambassador to the U.S., tried to turn the โtransparencyโ critique against the U.S. Per Reuters, he criticized the โlack of transparency, not in terms of science, not in terms of medical treatment, but in terms of some of the political developments, especially here in the United Statesโฆ We are doing our best to have transparency. We are discovering, we are learning. At the same time, we are sharing,โ Cui added.
โChina and Germany have maintained close communication and exchangesโ during the epidemic, the Chinese foreign ministry said in response to Angela Merkelโs comments that โthe more transparent China is about the origin of the virus, the better it is for everyone in the world in order to learn from it,โ per the SCMP.
โโNo, I never said [thereโs] no human-to-human transmission in the publicย โ never, ever,โ George Gao Fu [้ซ็ฆ Gฤo Fรบ], director of the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, told state media China Global Television Network in the interview aired on Monday,โ the SCMP reports.
Chinese scientist Shรญ Zhรจnglรฌ ็ณๆญฃไธฝ, a principal investigator at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, has previously said that she could โguarantee on my lifeโ that the virus hadnโt originated in her labs. A Wall Street Journal profileย of her quotes international colleagues of hers who also donโt believe that conspiracy theory, unlike a segment of Trump administration officials.
The Peopleโs Daily is implicitly pushing backย against the common criticism that China has underreported its own COVID-19 numbers in a piece titled US COVID-19 statistics challenged by multiple research: lethal virus is far more widespread in the country than previously thought.