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Tag: Wuhan

  • Biden administration suspends funding for Wuhan lab | CNN Politics

    Biden administration suspends funding for Wuhan lab | CNN Politics



    CNN
     — 

    The Biden administration has suspended funding for the Wuhan Institute of Virology following a monthslong review that determined that the Chinese research institute “is not compliant with federal regulations and is not presently responsible,” according to a memo from the Department of Health and Human Services.

    HHS, which conducted the review, also proposed barring the Wuhan Institute from doing business with the federal government going forward, according to the memo, which is dated to Monday and was first reported by Bloomberg.

    The lab has not received any federal funding from the US National Institutes of Health since July 2020, according to an HHS spokesperson.

    The determination came after the research institute failed to provide the National Institutes of Health with requested documents amid reported safety concerns at the lab.

    “This action aims to ensure that WIV does not receive another dollar of federal funding,” an HHS spokesperson said in a statement. “The move was undertaken due to WIV’s failure to provide documentation on WIV’s research requested by NIH related to concerns that WIV violated NIH’s biosafety protocols.”

    In Monday’s memorandum, HHS’s deputy assistant secretary for acquisition concludes that the Wuhan Institute’s “disregard of the NIH’s requests” and the NIH’s conclusion that the institute’s research likely violated biosafety protocols present a risk that the institute “not only previously violated, but is currently violating, and will continue to violate, protocols of the NIH on biosafety.”

    “Therefore, I have determined that the immediate suspension of WIV is necessary to mitigate any potential public health risk,” the official, whose name is redacted, writes in the memo.

    The Wuhan Institute of Virology is at the center of a theory that Covid-19 escaped from the lab in late 2019, triggering the global pandemic.

    The US intelligence community has yet to reach a conclusion about where the virus originated. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence released a declassified report last month that stated the US intelligence community could not determine whether researchers at the lab who fell ill in the fall of 2019 were infected with Covid-19, but identified safety and security issues at the lab. Many other experts say evidence suggests that the coronavirus likely emerged naturally and spread to humans in a Wuhan seafood market.

    The National Institutes of Health notified EcoHealth Alliance – a US-based organization that received a 2014 grant from NIH that was partly funneled to the Wuhan Institute – in April 2020 that it was reviewing allegations linking the Wuhan Institute to the coronavirus pandemic. And in July of that year, NIH told EcoHealth it had received reports of “biosafety concerns” at the lab.

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  • House Intel panel chairman says Chinese president wants

    House Intel panel chairman says Chinese president wants

    After Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit with Russian President Vladimir Putin this week, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee told CBS News he thinks Xi may be eyeing a future consolidation of the power of authoritarian regimes.

    Asked about the national security implications of a closer relationship between China and Russia, Republican Rep. Mike Turner, of Ohio, replied, “President Xi is saying, ‘I want to go to a new era where authoritarian regimes win over democracy and freedom.’ That’s essential for us to double down. And we’re going to make certain that we make certain our military is strong, that we rise to this occasion of challenge and that we ensure that they don’t get the change that they’re asking for.”

    Turner, a member of the congressional Gang of Eight, is briefed on the most sensitive government intelligence. The Ohio congressman has also been deeply involved in efforts to declassify intelligence about the origins of COVID-19, which according to the CDC has contributed to the deaths of more than 1.1 million Americans.

    Earlier this week, President Joe Biden signed bipartisan legislation to require Avril Haines, the director of national intelligence, to declassify any information about links between the origins of the pandemic and the Wuhan Institute of Virology, the same city where the pandemic was first reported.   

    “I think that they’re going to see that there is substantial evidence concerning a lab leak and that there’s only speculative evidence with respect to a natural occurrence,” Turner said. “And this is going to be very different than what people concluded upon reading the declassified material that the administration has released.”

    Some virologists say spread from another species into humans is a more likely explanation for how the outbreak began. A recent analysis of samples collected from a market in Wuhan found the virus was shed in close proximity to live animals susceptible to infection. However, these scientists also urged further studies into key questions around COVID’s origins.

    “We continue to call on China to be transparent in sharing data and to conduct the necessary investigations and share the results. Understanding how the pandemic began remains both a moral and scientific imperative,” World Health Organization Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters

    Turner predicted that the declassified intelligence would “help people become informed as to really where else the investigations need to go and that there is significant information that we have that would lead people to the conclusion, as Director Wray has said of the FBI, that (it) is his conclusion that it would be a lab leak in origin.” 

    In early March, FBI Director Christopher Wray said in an interview with Fox News that “the FBI has for quite some time now assessed that the origins of the pandemic are most likely a potential lab incident.”

    While intelligence agencies have not been able to reach a consensus on the origin of the pandemic, the Energy Department, too, recently concluded with “low confidence” that it is plausible that an accidental lab leak was the source of the coronavirus. 

    In Ottawa Friday, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm told CBS News’ Christina Ruffini that the Energy Department’s report “is still classified,” and said that the intelligence community is currently “going through the process of determining what can be unclassified.” She added that currently, the sources and methods in the department’s report remain classified. 

    In January 2021, a State Department fact sheet released by the outgoing Trump administration found “several researchers inside the WIV (Wuhan Institute of Virology) became sick in (the) Autumn 2019, before the first identified case of the outbreak, with symptoms consistent with both COVID-19 and common seasonal illnesses.”

    Turner said he would press the intelligence community “to release the names of individuals who were involved, and that may have been in contact in a lab release situation,” so that his committee is able to follow up with them.

    He also intends to seek information about the scientific experts who advised the U.S. government about COVID-19 origins.

    “I think they should release the information as to who they were talking to before, what scientists, what experts did they talk to that gave them the ability to say that they think it was of natural occurrence,” he said.
    Those types of names, information, dates, data that had not been made public, I think will allow for greater scrutiny, really, of this whole incident and what the administration needs to do next.”

    Grace Kazarian contributed to this report.

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  • Records may show double billing for some US-supported work done at Chinese research facilities

    Records may show double billing for some US-supported work done at Chinese research facilities

    Records may show double billing for some US-supported work done at Chinese research facilities – CBS News


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    CBS News has reviewed records that may show the U.S. government paid twice for aspects of projects carried out at a research lab in Wuhan and other facilities in China. Now USAID’s internal watchdog has opened a probe after receiving information from Republican Sen. Roger Marshall. Senior investigative correspondent Catherine Herridge reports. Editor’s note: Graphics in the video have been updated and the web version of this report has been updated to include a comment about our report by Peter Daszak of EcoHealth Alliance.

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  • New genetic analysis finds clues to animal origin of COVID outbreak

    New genetic analysis finds clues to animal origin of COVID outbreak

    The World Health Organization called Friday for Chinese health authorities to release genetic sequences of SARS-CoV-2 the country recently took down from an international database, after an analysis of the data found it offered new clues that might point towards an animal origin for the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The plea comes after a group of scientists outside China analyzed genetic sequences of SARS-CoV-2 viruses that had been initially posted late last month to the GISAID database by China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention. The database is a site where scientists worldwide can access and share genetic sequencing and other data.

    The data came from samples taken in early 2020 around the Huanan animal market in Wuhan, which investigations by U.S. and Chinese authorities had pointed to as a potential early epicenter for the outbreak.

    Analysis of those samples found “molecular evidence” of animals like raccoon dogs at the market intermingled in swabs from the same spots that turned up the shedding from the virus itself in the market. 

    Raccoon dogs are a species susceptible to SARS-CoV-2 infection that could potentially have served as an intermediate host, carrying the virus from bats or another source to humans. However, the samples only indicate that both raccoon dogs and the virus were present at the market; it is not direct proof that the species was the carrier.

    Raccoon dog - file photo
    File photo of a raccoon dog 

    ARTERRA/Universal Images Group via Getty Images


    “We need to make clear that the virus has not been identified in an animal in the market or in animal samples from the market, nor have we actually found the animals that infected humans. What this does is provides clues. It provides clues to help us understand what may have happened,” the WHO’s Maria Van Kerkhove told reporters Friday of the findings.

    This new data prompted a meeting Tuesday of the WHO’s Scientific Advisory Group for the Origins of Novel Pathogens for the international scientists to present their analysis, as well as with the Chinese CDC researchers who had initially posted the data.

    It is not clear why China’s CDC later requested to remove the sequences they had originally posted to GISAID last month or why they waited three years to release the data. 

    “We have been told by GISAID that the data from China CDC is being updated and expanded. But again, we have called on China CDC directly to make that data accessible in full. And so that remains absolutely fundamental,” Van Kerkhove said.

    The data had initially been posted by the Chinese researchers as part of work on a publication initially released last year as a preprint, she said. 

    Researchers from China’s CDC released a preprint last year, which is now “under review,” that concluded that the Huanan market “might have acted as an amplifier” for spread of the virus introduced to the market by humans.

    George Gao, the preprint’s lead author and the former head of the Chinese CDC, downplayed the significance of the new analysis to Science magazine. Gao said that it “had been known there was illegal animal dealing and this is why the market was immediately shut down.”

    Gao declined to comment on why the sequences were initially posted and then taken down, deferring comment to GISAID. GISAID did not immediately return a request for comment.

    Questions also are unanswered about the new analysis, which was first reported by The Atlantic. For example, Van Kerkhove declined to specify additional details about how and what other animals were identified in the sequencing analysis, deferring comment to the researchers.

    French scientist Florence Débarre, named by The Atlantic as the researcher who initially spotted the sequences, did not respond to a request for comment. 

    On Twitter, Débarre wrote that they were “not planning to communicate results before our report was finished. Finishing the report is my current priority.”

    But even if Chinese health authorities repost the sequences they removed from GISAID, Van Kerkhove cautioned that far more research would be needed to understand if COVID-19’s origins could be conclusively linked to animals sold at the market. 

    “We have repeatedly asked for studies to be done in other markets in Wuhan and in Hubei and across China. We have repeatedly asked for studies to trace those animals back to their source farms so that we can go back in time and actually look to see where the animals came from and if any testing had been done,” said Van Kerkhove.

    While scientists have discovered evidence that suggests COVID-19 likely had zoonotic origins — that the virus emerged from animals that infected humans, similar to previous viruses — some elements of the U.S. intelligence community have concluded that it’s plausible the pandemic originated from a laboratory accident.

    “Based on my initial analysis of the data, I came to believe, and I still believe today, that it indicates that COVID 19 more likely was the result of an accidental lab leak than a result of a natural spillover event,” former Trump administration CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield told a hearing organized by House Republicans earlier this month.

    In an interview with CBS News on Thursday, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who helped lead the U.S. response to the pandemic, said it’s possible we may never get a conclusive answer to the question of COVID’s origins.

    “There really is no definitive proof,” he said. “We may not ever know precisely and definitively.”

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  • US agency assessment backing Covid lab leak theory raises more questions than answers — and backlash from China | CNN

    US agency assessment backing Covid lab leak theory raises more questions than answers — and backlash from China | CNN

    Editor’s Note: A version of this story appeared in CNN’s Meanwhile in China newsletter, a three-times-a-week update exploring what you need to know about the country’s rise and how it impacts the world. Sign up here.


    Hong Kong
    CNN
     — 

    The US Department of Energy’s assessment that Covid-19 most likely emerged due to a laboratory accident in China has reignited fierce debate and attention on the question of how the pandemic began.

    But the “low confidence” determination, made in a newly updated classified report, has raised more questions than answers, as the department has publicly provided no new evidence to back the claim. It’s also generated fierce pushback from China.

    “We urge the US to respect science and facts, stop politicizing this issue, stop its intelligence-led, politics-driven origins-tracing,” a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said on Wednesday.

    The Department of Energy assessment is part of a broader US effort in which intelligence agencies were asked by President Joe Biden in 2021 to examine the origins of the coronavirus, which was first detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

    That overall assessment from the intelligence community was inconclusive, and then, as now, there has yet to be a decisive link established between the virus and a specific animal or other route – as China continues to stonewall international investigations into the origins of the virus.

    Four agencies and the National Intelligence Council assessed with low confidence that the virus likely jumped from animals to humans through natural exposure, while one assessed with moderate confidence that the pandemic was the result of a laboratory-related accident. Three other intelligence community elements were unable to coalesce around either explanation without additional information, according to a declassified version of the 2021 report.

    The majority of agencies remain undecided or lean toward the virus having a natural origin – a hypothesis also widely favored by scientists with expertize in the field. But the change from the US Department of Energy has now deepened the split in the intelligence community, especially as the director of the FBI this week commented publicly for the first time on his agency’s similar determination made with “medium confidence.”

    Intelligence agencies can make assessments with either low, medium or high confidence. A low confidence assessment generally means the information obtained is not reliable enough, or is too fragmented to make a more definitive judgment.

    And while the assessment and new commentary has pulled the theory back into the spotlight, neither agency has released evidence or information backing their determinations. That raises crucial questions about their basis – and shines the spotlight back on gaping, outstanding unknowns and need for further research.

    Hear FBI director remark on Covid lab leak theory

    Scientists largely believe the virus most likely emerged from a natural spillover from an infected animal to people, as many viruses before it, though they widely acknowledge the need for more research of all options. Many have also questioned the lack of data released to substantiate the latest claim.

    Virologist Thea Fischer, who in 2021 traveled to Wuhan as part of a World Health Organization (WHO) origins probe and remains a part of ongoing WHO tracing efforts, said it was “very important” that any new assessments related to the origin of the virus are documented by evidence.

    “(These are) strong accusations against a public research laboratory in China and can’t stand alone without substantial evidence,” said Fischer, a professor at the University of Copenhagen.

    “Hopefully they will share with the WHO soon so the evidence can be known and assessed by international health experts just as all other evidence concerning the pandemic origin.”

    A senior US intelligence official told the Wall Street Journal, which first reported the new Department of Energy assessment, that the update to the assessment was conducted in light of new intelligence, further study of academic literature and in consultation with experts outside government.

    The idea that the virus could have emerged from a lab accident became more prominent as a spotlight was turned on coronavirus research being done at local facilities, such as the Wuhan Institute of Virology. It was further enhanced amid a failure to find a “smoking gun” showing which animal could have passed the virus to people at Wuhan’s Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market – the location linked to a number of early known cases – amid limitations to follow-up research.

    Some experts who have been closely involved in examining existing information, however, are skeptical of the new assessment giving the theory more weight.

    “Given that so much of the data we have points to a spillover event occurring at the Huanan market in late 2019 I doubt there’s anything very significant in it or new information that would change our current understanding,” said David Robertson, a professor in the University of Glasgow’s School of Infection and Immunity, who was involved in recent research with findings that supported the natural origin theory.

    He noted that locations of early human cases centered on the market, positive environmental samples, and confirmation that live animals susceptible to the virus were for sale there are among evidence supporting the natural origins theory – while there’s no data supporting a lab leak.

    “The extent of this evidence continually gets lost (in media discussion) … when in fact we know a lot about what happened, and arguably more than other outbreaks,” he said.

    Security personnel stand guard outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan as members of the World Health Organization (WHO) team investigating the origins of the Covid-19 coronavirus make a visit on February 3, 2021.

    Efforts to understand how the pandemic started have been further complicated by China’s lack of transparency – especially as the origin question spiraled into another point of bitter contention within rising US-China tensions of recent years.

    Beijing has blocked robust, long-term international field investigations and refused to allow a laboratory audit, which could bring clarity, and been reticent to share details and data around domestic research to uncover the cause. However, it repeatedly maintains that it has been transparent and cooperative with the WHO.

    Chinese officials carefully controlled the single WHO-backed investigation it did allow on the ground in 2021, citing disease control measures to restrict visiting experts to their hotel rooms for half their trip and to prevent them from sharing meals with their Chinese counterparts – cutting off an opportunity for more informal information sharing.

    Citing data protection, Beijing has also declined to allow its own investigatory measures, like testing stored blood samples from Wuhan or combing through hospital data for potential “patient zeros,” to be verified by researchers outside the country.

    China has fiercely denied that the virus emerged from a lab accident, and has repeatedly tried to assert it could have arrived in the country for the initial outbreak from elsewhere – including a US laboratory, without offering any evidence supporting the claim.

    But a top WHO official as recently as last month publicly called for “more cooperation and collaboration with our colleagues in China to advance studies that need to take place in China”– including studies of markets and farms that could have been involved.

    “These studies need to be conducted in China and we need cooperation from our colleagues there to advance our understandings,” WHO technical lead for Covid-19 Maria Van Kerkhove said at a media briefing.

    When asked about the Department of Energy assessment by CNN, a WHO representative said the organization and its origins tracing advisory body “will keep examining all available scientific evidence that would help us advance the knowledge on the origin of SARS CoV 2 and we call on China and the scientific community to undertake necessary studies in that direction.”

    “Until we have more evidence all hypotheses are still on the table,” the representative said.

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  • Department of Energy finds COVID Wuhan lab leak theory

    Department of Energy finds COVID Wuhan lab leak theory

    Department of Energy finds COVID Wuhan lab leak theory “plausible” but with “low confidence” – CBS News


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    A new classified report by the U.S. Energy Department has concluded with “low confidence” that it is plausible the COVID-19 pandemic originated from a laboratory leak. The World Health Organization recently shuttered it’s COVID-19 probe because of the Chinese government’s lack of cooperation, making it even harder to determine the origin or how to prevent a future pandemic. Catherine Herridge reports.

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  • Packed hospitals contradict China’s COVID-19 data

    Packed hospitals contradict China’s COVID-19 data

    Packed hospitals contradict China’s COVID-19 data – CBS News


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    A rapid surge of COVID-19 infections in China is overwhelming the country’s hospitals. Some health experts predict China could suffer up to 1 million COVID-19 deaths in the next few months. Elizabeth Palmer has the latest.

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  • China students return home amid COVID travel spread fears

    China students return home amid COVID travel spread fears

    BEIJING — Some Chinese universities say they will allow students to finish the semester from home in hopes of reducing the potential of a bigger COVID-19 outbreak during the January Lunar New Year travel rush.

    It wasn’t clear how many schools were taking part, but universities in Shanghai and nearby cities said students would be given the option of either returning home early or staying on campus and undergoing testing every 48 hours. The Lunar New Year, which falls on Jan. 22 this year, is traditionally China’s busiest travel season.

    Universities have been the scene of frequent lockdowns over the past three years, occasionally leading to clashes between the authorities and students confined to campus or even their dorm rooms.

    Tuesday’s announcements came as China begins relaxing its strict “zero-COVID” policy, allowing people with mild symptoms to stay home rather than be sent to a quarantine center, among other changes that followed widespread protests.

    Starting from Tuesday, China has stopped tracking some travel, potentially reducing the likelihood people will be forced into quarantine for visiting COVID-19 hot spots. Despite that, China’s international borders remain largely shut and there has been no word on when restrictions on inbound travelers and Chinese wishing to go overseas will be eased.

    The move follows the government’s dramatic announcement last week that it was ending many of the strictest measures, following three years during which it enforced some of the world’s tightest virus restrictions.

    Last month in Beijing and several other cities, protests over the restrictions grew into calls for leader Xi Jinping and the Communist Party to step down — a level of public dissent not seen in decades.

    While met with relief, the relaxation has also sparked concerns about a new wave of infections potentially overwhelming health care resources in some areas.

    With so many people staying home, Beijing’s downtown streets were eerily quiet on Tuesday. Small lines formed outside fever clinics — the number of which has been recently increased from 94 to 303 — and at pharmacies, where cold and flu medications have become harder to find.

    Many residents of mainland China have taken to ordering medication from pharmacies in Hong Kong, which has already relaxed many restrictions.

    The government of the semi-autonomous southern city took a further step Tuesday, saying it would remove restrictions for arriving travelers that currently prevent them from dining in restaurants or going to bars for the first three days. It would also scrap the use of its contact-tracing app, although vaccine requirements to enter venues like restaurants will remain in place. The new measures take effect Wednesday.

    The easing of control measures on the mainland means a sharp drop in obligatory testing from which daily infections numbers are compiled, but cases appear to be rising rapidly, with many testing themselves at home and staying away from hospitals.

    China reported 7,451 new infections on Monday, bringing the nation’s total to 372,763 — more than double the level on Oct. 1. It has recorded 5,235 deaths — compared to 1.1 million in the United States.

    China’s government-supplied figures have not been independently verified and questions have been raised about whether the ruling Communist Party has sought to minimize numbers of cases and deaths.

    The U.S. consulates in the northeastern Chinese city of Shenyang and the central city of Wuhan will offer only emergency services from Tuesday “in response to increased number of COVID-19 cases,” the State Department said.

    “Mission China makes every effort to ensure full consular services are available to U.S. citizens living in the PRC, but further disruptions are possible,” an e-mailed message said, using the initials for China’s official name, the People’s Republic of China.

    Xi’s government is still officially committed to stopping virus transmission, the last major country to try. But the latest moves suggest the party will tolerate more cases without quarantines or shutting down travel or businesses as it winds down its “zero-COVID” strategy.

    Amid the unpredictable messaging from Beijing, experts warn there still is a chance the ruling party might reverse course and reimpose restrictions if a large-scale outbreak ensues.

    The change in policy comes after protests erupted Nov. 25 after 10 people died in a fire in the northwestern city of Urumqi. Many questioned whether COVID-19 restrictions impeded rescue efforts. Authorities denied the claims spread online, but demonstrators gave voice to longstanding frustration in cities such as Shanghai that have endured severe lockdowns.

    The party responded with a massive show of force and an unknown number of people were arrested at the protests or in the days following.

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  • China reports 2 new COVID deaths as some restrictions eased

    China reports 2 new COVID deaths as some restrictions eased

    HONG KONG — China on Sunday reported two additional deaths from COVID-19 as some cities move cautiously to ease anti-pandemic restrictions following increasingly vocal public frustrations.

    The National Health Commission said one death was reported each in the provinces of Shandong and Sichuan. No information was given about the ages of the victims or whether they had been fully vaccinated.

    China, where the virus first was detected in late 2019 in the central city of Wuhan, is the last major country trying to stop transmission completely through quarantines, lockdowns and mass testing. Concerns over vaccination rates are believed to figure prominently in the ruling Communist Party’s determination to stick to its hard-line strategy.

    While nine in 10 Chinese have been vaccinated, only 66% of people over 80 have gotten one shot while 40% have received a booster, according to the commission. It said 86% of people over 60 are vaccinated.

    Given those figures and the fact that relatively few Chinese have been built up antibodies by being exposed to the virus, some fear millions could die if restrictions were lifted entirely.

    Yet, an outpouring of public anger appears to have prompted authorities to lift some of the more onerous restrictions, even as they say the “zero-COVID” strategy — which aims to isolate every infected person — is still in place.

    The demonstrations, the largest and most widely spread in decades, erupted Nov. 25 after a fire in an apartment building in the northwestern city of Urumqi killed at least 10 people. That set off angry questions online about whether firefighters or victims trying to escape were blocked by locked doors or other anti-virus controls. Authorities denied that, but the deaths became a focus of public frustration.

    The country saw several days of protests across cities including Shanghai and Beijing, with protesters demanding an easing of COVID-19 curbs. Some demanded Chinese President Xi Jinping step down, an extraordinary show of public dissent in a society over which the ruling Communist Party exercises near total control.

    Beijing and some other Chinese cities announced that riders can board buses and subways without a virus test for the first time in months. The requirement has led to complaints from some Beijing residents that even though the city has shut many testing stations, most public venues still require COVID-19 tests.

    On Sunday, China announced another 35,775 cases from the past 24 hours, 31,607 of which were asymptomatic, bringing its total to 336,165 with 5,235 deaths.

    While many have questioned the accuracy of the Chinese figures, they remain relatively low compared to the U.S. and other nations which are now relaxing controls and trying to live with the virus that has killed at least 6.6 million people worldwide and sickened almost 650 million.

    China still imposes mandatory quarantine for incoming travelers even as its infection numbers are low compared to its 1.4 billion population.

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  • ‘Xi Jinping step down’: Protests flare over China’s zero-Covid policy; all you need to know

    ‘Xi Jinping step down’: Protests flare over China’s zero-Covid policy; all you need to know

    For a third day straight, protests continued in China, with President Xi Jinping’s government facing mounting anger at its zero-Covid policy. China, which continues to grapple with the spread of coronavirus, saw over 40,000 new infections on Sunday, while hundreds of demonstrators and police clashed in Shanghai on Sunday night over Covid restrictions.

    The wave of civil disobedience is unprecedented in mainland China since President Xi Jinping assumed power a decade ago. The protest comes on the back of President Xi Jinping’s signature zero-Covid policy, which has been in place since the pandemic began in 2020.

    What’s happening in China?

    In China, where street demonstrations are extremely rare, anger and frustration have mounted after the deaths of 10 people in an apartment fire in Urumqi, Xinjiang. The public believe the deaths were a result of excessive lockdown measures which delayed rescue. At least 10 people were killed and nine injured when the fire broke out, according to the local fire department. 

    In Urumqi, a city with a population of 4 million, some people have been locked down for as long as 100 days.

    Also, in the country’s most populous city Shanghai, residents gathered on Saturday night at Wulumuqi Road, which is named after Urumqi, for a candlelight vigil. However, that turned into a protest soon.

    The crowd held up blank sheets of paper representing a protest symbol against censorship. Videos from the protest site show people shout: “Lift lockdown for Urumqi, lift lockdown for Xinjiang, lift lockdown for all of China.

    Demonstrators were also seen shouting, “Down with the Chinese Communist Party, down with Xi Jinping”, according to witnesses and videos.

    Sunday saw a large crowd gather in the southwestern metropolis of Chengdu, according to videos on social media, where they held up blank sheets of paper and chanted: “We don’t want lifelong rulers. We don’t want emperors,” a reference to Xi, who has scrapped presidential term limits.
    In the central city of Wuhan, where the pandemic began three years ago, videos on social media showed hundreds of residents take to the streets, smashing through metal barricades, overturning COVID testing tents and demanding an end to lockdowns.

    Other cities that have seen public dissent include Lanzhou in the northwest, where residents on Saturday overturned COVID staff tents and smashed testing booths, posts on social media showed. Protesters said they were put under lockdown even though no one had tested positive.

    At Beijing’s Tsinghua University on Sunday, dozens of people held a peaceful protest against COVID restrictions during which they sang the national anthem, according to images and videos posted on social media.

    What is the zero-Covid policy?

    China, where the first case of the coronavirus was reported in December 2019 in Wuhan city, follows a “zero-Covid” strategy, which includes mass testing, strict isolation rules, travel restrictions and local lockdowns. China believes in taking dynamic measures in areas where Covid-19 rears its head in order to root it out. The zero-Covid policy aims at eliminating Covid-19 cases rather than mitigating them.

    It is also to be noted that China defends the policy saying it is a “reality” that coronavirus is still lingering while describing Beijing’s measures as the “most cost-effective”.

    According to Sun Yeli, spokesperson for the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC), China’s measures to tackle COVID-19 have worked well for the country and the zero-COVID policy is a science-based policy.

    Yeli further added that it is a part of its epidemic response efforts and the dynamic zero-COVID policy has been adopted in light of China’s national realities and it is a science-based policy.

    (With inputs from agencies)

    Also Read: ‘Xi Jinping step down’: Massive protests in China over zero-Covid policy

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  • Video: 视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻

    Video: 视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻

    时报的视觉调查团队审阅了李文亮的医疗记录,独家采访了一位目击了抢救过程的医生,揭示了关于李文亮病情和死亡的重要新细节。

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  • Video: Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence

    Video: Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence

    new video loaded: Inside the Final Days of the Doctor China Tried to Silence

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