WHO
team probing COVID-19 visits Wuhan lab, meets 'Bat Woman'
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[February 03, 2021]
By Martin Quin Pollard and Thomas Peter
WUHAN, China (Reuters) -A team of investigators led by the World Health
Organization visited a virus research laboratory in China's central city
of Wuhan and met with a prominent virologist there in its search for
clues to the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The
experts spent about 3-1/2 hours at the heavily-guarded Wuhan
Institute of Virology, which has been at the centre of some
conspiracy theories that claim a laboratory leak caused the city's
first coronavirus outbreak at the end of 2019.
"Extremely important meeting today with staff at WIV including Dr
Shi Zhengli. Frank, open discussion. Key questions asked &
answered," team member Peter Daszak said on Twitter.
Shi, a well-known virus hunter who has long focused on bat
coronaviruses - earning her the nickname "Bat Woman" - was among the
first last year to isolate the novel coronavirus that causes
COVID-19.
Most scientists, including Shi, reject the hypothesis of a lab leak.
However, some experts speculate that a virus captured from the wild
could have figured in lab experiments to test the risks of a human
spillover and then escaped via an infected staff member.
"Very interesting. Many questions," Thea Fischer, a Danish member of
the team, called from her car as it sped away from the lab following
Wednesday's visit, in response to a question whether the team had
found anything.
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Some scientists have called for China to release details of all
coronavirus samples studied at the lab, to see which most closely
resembles SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the respiratory disease.
The WHO, which has sought to manage expectations for the Wuhan
mission, has said its members would be limited to visits organised
by their Chinese hosts and have no contact with community members,
because of health restrictions.
While the novel coronavirus that sparked the pandemic was first
identified in Wuhan, Beijing has sought to cast doubt on the notion
that it originated in China, pointing to imported frozen food as a
possible conduit.
The team will spend two weeks conducting field work after having
completed two weeks in hotel quarantine after arrival in Wuhan.
(Interactive graphic tracking global spread of coronavirus: https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-maps)
(Reporting by Thomas Peter and Martin Quin in Wuhan; Writing by
David Stanway and Tony Munroe; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and
Pravin Char)
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