Senate,
House intelligence committees also probing COVID-19 origins -officials
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[May 26, 2021]
By Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate and
House of Representatives intelligence committees are conducting their
own investigations into the origins of the COVID-19 virus and how the
U.S. government responded to the crisis, two Congressional officials
said.
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U.S. intelligence agencies are examining reports that researchers at
a laboratory in Wuhan, China, were seriously ill in 2019 a month
before the first COVID-19 cases were reported, U.S. government
sources have told Reuters.
A Congressional official told Reuters on Tuesday the Senate
Intelligence Committee, led by Democrat Mark Warner, has asked the
spy agencies about various issues related to the pandemic, including
whether it could have been started in a laboratory accident or
originated with animals.
The official said that the committee would be looking into the
accuracy of the still-classified reports that researchers at the
Wuhan Institute of Virology became so ill they sought hospital care
in November 2019.
Three government sources cautioned that U.S. spy agencies had not
yet reached any conclusion as to the origins of the virus, which
first appeared in Wuhan and then spread worldwide.
Meanwhile, the House Intelligence Committee, chaired by Democrat
Adam Schiff, has been conducting a "deep dive" into U.S.
intelligence agencies' "response to and reporting about the
pandemic," a second Congressional official said.
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The House panel is continuing
to press the agencies for information, the
official said. The committee fears that "China’s
lack of cooperation and transparency will
continue to frustrate all efforts to develop an
authoritative account for the origins of the
virus." Last week, the House
committee's Republican minority issued its own report on COVID-19,
focusing particularly on the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
The GOP report asserted that there was "significant circumstantial
evidence raises serious concerns that the COVID19 outbreak may have
been a leak" from the institute, suggested the Wuhan lab was
involved in biological weapons research, and that Beijing had
attempted to "cover up" the virus' origins.
(Reporting By Mark Hosenball; Editing by Heather Timmons and Sonya
Hepinstall)
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