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Thursday, 3 July, 2025
HomeCoronavirusWithout Chinese data, Covid origins will remain a mystery – WHO

Without Chinese data, Covid origins will remain a mystery – WHO

An expert group from the World Health Organisation has failed to find a definitive answer to Covid-19’s origins, the scientists saying they still aren’t sure how the pandemic – the worst health emergency in a century – began.

That was the unsatisfying conclusion in a final report from the group charged by the WHO to investigate the pandemic’s origins, according to Euronews.

Marietjie Venter, the group’s Chair, said at a press briefing that most scientific data support the hypothesis of the new coronavirus jumping to humans from animals.

That was also the conclusion drawn by the first WHO expert group that investigated the pandemic’s origins in 2021, when scientists concluded the virus probably spread from bats to humans, via another intermediary animal.

At the time, WHO said a lab leak was “extremely unlikely”.

Venter said that after more than three years of work, WHO’s expert group was unable to get the necessary data to evaluate whether or not Covid-19 was the result of a lab accident, despite repeated requests for hundreds of genetic sequences and more detailed biosecurity information that were made to the Chinese government.

“Therefore, this hypothesis could not be investigated or excluded,” she said. “It was deemed to be very speculative, based on political opinions and not backed up by science.”

She said that the 27-member group did not reach a consensus; one member resigned earlier this week and three others asked for their names to be removed from the report.

Venter said there was no evidence to prove that Covid-19 had been manipulated in a lab, nor was there any indication that the virus had been spreading before December 2019 anywhere outside China.

“Until more scientific data become available, the origins of how SARS-CoV-2 entered human populations will remain inconclusive,” Venter said.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said it was a “moral imperative” to determine how Covid began, noting that the virus killed at least 20m people, wiped at least $10 trillion from the global economy, and upended the lives of billions of people.

Last year, The Associated Press found that the Chinese government froze meaningful domestic and international efforts to trace the virus’s origins in the first weeks of the outbreak in 2020 and that the WHO itself may have missed early opportunities to investigate how Covid-19 began.

President Donald Trump has long blamed the emergence of the coronavirus on a laboratory accident in China, but a US intelligence analysis found there was insufficient evidence to prove the theory.

Chinese officials have repeatedly dismissed the idea that the pandemic could have started in a lab, saying that the search for its origins should be conducted in other countries.

Last September, researchers zeroed in on a short list of animals they think might have spread Covid-19 to humans, including racoon dogs, civet cats, and bamboo rats.

 

Euronews article – Will we ever know for sure how COVID-19 began? Not without more data from China, WHO says (Open access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

Chinese scientist raises Covid lab leak theory

 

Wuhan virus escape probably accidental – US agencies

 

Wuhan scientists planned to release coronavirus into bat caves: leaked papers

 

New studies point Covid origin evidence to Wuhan wet market

 

WHO report on Covid-19’s Wuhan origins ‘raises more questions than answers’

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