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Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

Official: WHO Has 'No limit' in Month-Long Wuhan Mission


Wed 13 Jan 2021 | 04:07 PM
Yassmine Elsayed

An official among the global team of scientists led by the World Health Organization (WHO), due to arrive in China tomorrow, said the group will spend around a month in the city of Wuhan, including two weeks in quarantine to investigate the origins of the novel coronavirus.

Hung Nguyen, a Vietnamese biologist, told Reuters that he did not expect any restrictions to the 10-member team's work in Wuhan where the first human cases were detected in late 2019.

Several countries, including the United States, have hinted at China hiding of information on its initial outbreak, and called for a transparent WHO-led investigation.

"My understanding is in fact there is no limit in accessing information we might need for the team," Hung said, speaking via video-call from a Singapore airport hotel ahead of his early morning flight.

"We will see. We are not in China yet."

Hung said the team had been having regular virtual meetings with Chinese virus researchers over the last few months ahead of the trip.

Earlier, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said his organisation is looking forward to working with China to identify the source of the virus.

He said  he was "very disappointed" when WHO experts were denied authorisation to enter earlier this month, forcing two members of the team to turn back.

China said there had been a "misunderstanding".

Hung, who is based in Kenya, said his particular area of expertise, and the reason he was selected for the mission, was food safety risks in wet markets.

The WHO has said it is not looking for "culprits" and is willing to go "anywhere and everywhere" to find out how the virus emerged.

Peter Ben Embarek, WHO's top expert on animal diseases that cross the species barrier, who went to China on a preliminary mission last July, is leading the delegation.

"What we would like to do with the international team and counterparts in China is to go back in the Wuhan environment, re-interview in-depth the initial cases, try to find other cases that were not detected at that time and try to see if we can push back the history of the first cases," Ben Embarek said in November.

Hung said he hoped the mission would reveal new details about the origins of a virus which has infected over 91 million and killed nearly 2 million people globally, but cautioned against finding firm answers.

"We want to find something, to find new information," he said.

"But, myself, I don't expect personally after this trip everything will be clear. But that is really a necessary step forward."