Trump Senate ally seeks China sanctions over COVID-19 probe
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[May 13, 2020]
By David Brunnstrom
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A prominent U.S.
Republican senator proposed legislation on Tuesday that would authorize
the U.S. president to impose far-reaching sanctions on China if it fails
to give a full account of events leading to the outbreak of the novel
coronavirus.
Senator Lindsey Graham, a close ally of President Donald Trump, said he
was convinced that had it not been for "deception" by China's ruling
Communist Party, the virus would not be in the United States, where it
has killed more than 80,000 Americans.
Graham said China had refused to allow investigators to study how the
outbreak started and added in a statement: "I’m convinced China will
never cooperate with a serious investigation unless they are made to do
so."
Trump critics, including some former officials, academics and
columnists, have said that while China has much to answer for, the U.S.
administration appears to be seeking to deflect attention from what they
see as a slow U.S. response to the crisis.
Graham said his "COVID-19 Accountability Act" would require the
president to make a certification to Congress within 60 days that China
had "provided a full and complete accounting to any COVID-19
investigation led by the United States, its allies or U.N. affiliate
such as the World Health Organization."
It would also require certification that China had closed all "wet
markets" that can expose humans to health risks, and released all Hong
Kong pro-democracy advocates arrested in post-pandemic crack-downs.
China is resolutely opposed to this "immoral" bill and has been open and
transparent since the beginning of the epidemic, said Chinese foreign
ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian, at a daily briefing in Beijing on
Wednesday.
The bill would authorize the president to impose a range of sanctions,
including asset freezes, travel bans and visa revocations, as well as
restrictions on loans to Chinese businesses by U.S. institutions and
banning Chinese firms from listing on U.S. exchanges.
The legislation was co-sponsored by eight other Republican senators.
China's Washington embassy did not respond to a request for comment. The
outbreak began in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.
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U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) wears a face mask during a break
in a Senate Health Education Labor and Pensions Committee hearing on
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., May 12, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
'FIX IT'
Trump and his Republican backers have repeatedly accused Beijing of
failing to alert the world to the severity and scope of the
outbreak, which has sparked a worldwide economic contraction and
threatened his November re-election chances.
Democratic Senator Tim Kaine, whose party controls the House, said
things "definitely went wrong in China" but there was a need to look
at the full story and the Trump administration should not escape
scrutiny.
"Let's get the story out on the table first and see what everybody's
part of this problem was, to fix it going forward, and then we can
decide about accountability," he told an event hosted by
Washington's Meridien Center.
A Democratic House aide said China continued to hide the facts about
the pandemic and there should be a full-scale international effort
to account for what has happened.
But the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, charged that
the U.S. State Department had ignored multiple deadlines to share
with Congress information on the virus’ origins.
"If the administration wants Congress to act, they should stop
stonewalling and show us the ‘evidence’ they claim to have," the
aide said.
The U.S. national security adviser, Robert O'Brien, and Larry Kudlow,
the national economic adviser, warned on Monday against investment
of federal retirement dollars in Chinese firms given "the
possibility of future sanctions will result from the culpable
actions of the Chinese government" over the coronavirus.U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has also hinted at future sanctions
on China for the devastation caused to the global economy and human
life.
(Reporting by David Brunnstrom; additional reporting by Alexandra
Alper; Editing by Bernadette Baum, Dan Grebler and Cynthia Osterman)
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