COVID-19, which emerged in China in late 2019, has killed 3.34
million people, cost the world trillions of dollars in lost income
and upended normal life for billions of people.
"More investigation is still needed to determine the origin of the
pandemic," said the 18 scientists, including Ravindra Gupta, a
clinical microbiologist at the University of Cambridge, and Jesse
Bloom, who studies the evolution of viruses at the Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center.
"Theories of accidental release from a lab and zoonotic spillover
both remain viable," the scientists including David Relman,
professor of microbiology at Stanford, said in a letter to the
journal Science.
https://science.sciencemag.org/
content/372/6543/694.1
The authors of the letter said the World Health Organization's
investigation into the origins of the virus had not made a "balanced
consideration" of the theory that it may have come from a laboratory
incident.
In its final report, written jointly with Chinese scientists, a
WHO-led team that spent four weeks in and around Wuhan in January
and February said the virus had probably been transmitted from bats
to humans through another animal, and that a lab leak was "extremely
unlikely" as a cause.
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But there are myriad different
ideas about the origin of the virus including a
series of conspiracy theories.
"We must take hypotheses about both natural and
laboratory spillovers seriously until we have
sufficient data," the scientists said, adding
that an intellectually rigorous and
dispassionate investigation needed to take
place.
"In this time of unfortunate anti-Asian
sentiment in some countries, we note that at the
beginning of the pandemic, it was Chinese
doctors, scientists, journalists, and citizens
who shared with the world crucial information
about the spread of the virus—often at great
personal cost."
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Kate
Holton and Giles Elgood)
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