Coronavirus leak from Wuhan lab was ‘unintentional’: US Senate Report

Coronavirus leak from Wuhan lab was 'unintentional': US Senate Report

The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic was likely caused by a “research-related incident” at a laboratory in Wuhan, according to a lengthy report by the US Senate. This finding lends support to the lab leak theory, which claims that the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which caused the deadly Covid pandemic, is the result of a lab leak. The mystery surrounding Covid’s genesis is discussed in the 302-page Senate report that Axios has obtained. The report claims that the nature and early distribution of the virus suggest that biosafety concerns may have contributed to its proliferation.

The first incidence of COVID-19 was discovered in the Chinese city of Wuhan

The investigation came to the following conclusion: “The preponderance of information affirms the plausibility of a research-related incident that was likely unintentional resulting from failures of biosafety containment during vaccine-related research.” After the COVID-19 outbreak was identified as a public health emergency of global concern in January 2020, it quickly turned into a pandemic. Millions of people died as a result of its destruction, and many more are still suffering from long-Covid.

The first incidence of Covid was discovered in the Chinese city of Wuhan, leaving researchers uncertain as to where it originated because there are two main hypotheses: either the virus was transmitted through wild animals or it may have spilled from a government lab. The Senate report has come to the conclusion that the latter is stronger even if the report doesn’t offer any specific data to refute the animal-to-human transmission. A condensed version of the report, which was published last year, is the outcome of former senator Richard Burr’s investigation into the pandemic’s causes.

Burr in a statement said that the report is “credible and worthy of inclusion in the international effort to determine how the pandemic started”

The report was provided to Axios a former senior Republican aide who apparently worked on the report. As quoted, the former aide said, “Since the team did not complete their work before Sen. Burr left office this became a product without a home. Former Sen. Burr has not reviewed this document and it didn’t go through the same vetting process our executive summary document released last year did, but this is worth releasing, in my view, and reflects the quality of work that was done by the team.” 

As quoted by Axios, Burr in a statement said that the report is “credible and worthy of inclusion in the international effort to determine how the pandemic started so that steps can be taken to prevent, or mitigate against, future pandemics”. 

Researchers from the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC) have recently released the results of an investigation of swabs that were obtained from a wet market in Wuhan, the alleged birthplace of Covid in China. The in-depth report was created after analyzing the samples that were gathered during the first several weeks of the Covid outbreak in Wuhan and were published in Nature on April 5th. The report verified that samples that tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 included animal DNA. The beginning of the epidemic has long been connected to the market. Experts have frequently asserted that a lack of cooperation from China has delayed an investigation into the causes of the epidemic, despite the numerous so-called fact-based findings.

Exit mobile version