No place for smears in virus battle

A medical worker takes a swab sample from a child for COVID-19 nucleic acid test at a testing site in Siming district of Xiamen, East China's Fujian province, July 30, 2021. (PHOTO / XINHUA)

China’s latest success in containing the Delta variant of the COVID-19 virus, following the previous achievements last year, has become the envy of many countries that are still agonizing over how to beat a fresh wave of new cases. But some Western nations are turning to their old playbook of smearing China.

China has committed to nationwide efforts to combat the pandemic. It is the first country to have overcome the coronavirus, and it has restored impressive positive economic growth this year.

The national-level coordination and widespread public confidence in measures taken by the authorities to fight COVID-19 were crucial to China’s success in containing the pandemic throughout last year, as well as in August this year when dealing with outbreaks of the Delta variant in the cities of Nanjing and Yangzhou, Jiangsu province; Zhengzhou, Henan province; and Zhangjiajie, Hunan province.

The country has realized that a coronavirus-free world and global economic recovery will be achievable only if the world battles the pandemic as one. Thus, China has provided more than 750 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines to over 100 nations, particularly to impoverished developing countries, to push for a better global response to the pandemic.

China has spared no effort in containing the deadly disease. In a place as populous as China, the authorities have kept daily infection numbers to just single or double digits through quarantining of arrivals, mass testing, vigorous contact tracing, lockdowns, travel curbs and other measures. China has battled the coronavirus with courage, determination and efficiency, for which State leadership and local officials deserve credit.

This is a time of enormous human suffering, yet the West has still wagged its finger at China with regard to the pandemic. From the beginning, some Western countries have blamed China and even fabricated information about the “lab leak theory”. Such finger-pointing not only hampers global joint efforts against the pandemic, but also threatens to shatter millions of lives.

There is no evidence to back allegations of a leak from a laboratory in Wuhan, Hubei province. 

When World Health Organization scientists conducted a site visit early this year to Wuhan in a joint investigation with Chinese experts on the virus’ origin, the conclusion was clear that it was highly unlikely that the virus could have leaked from the virology laboratory.

Yet the world’s leading health body seems to have abandoned the specialists’ findings after WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus weirdly called for a revisit to Wuhan and stressed that an inspection of a laboratory there was necessary to rule out the possibility the virus leaked from it. 

The move has fueled suspicion that the United States has a clear end-goal of stoking the hypothesis of the so-called lab leak theory for political purposes.

Above all, the call — by the WHO and some Western leaders — for a second phase of origin-tracing in China marks a violation of the spirit of science. Any queries or worries should have been raised after the specialists’ trip in January. The WHO’s release of new and contradictory messages six months after the trip would prove counterproductive in identifying the source of the novel coronavirus.

Smearing China has been a ploy to deflect the blame from Western nations’ bad responses to the pandemic. At the start of this year, many people in the US had high hopes that President Joe Biden would adopt a science-based anti-COVID pandemic approach, as opposed to that of his predecessor Donald Trump.

It is of the utmost importance for the international community to cooperate on fighting the coronavirus. Let us exchange anti-COVID practices and learn from one another, rather than continuing to smear China. Going forward, countries should accelerate efforts to combat the pandemic. 

First, leaders and health specialists need to step up the sharing of experiences on vaccination, lockdown and ways to revive the economy.

Second, nations can establish a better notification system for the occurrence of any new variants and the sharing of genetic material regarding them. Third, the world should overcome the inequality of vaccine access among countries.

The WHO has said that without controlling the pandemic in developing nations, we cannot overcome the pandemic.

Undistracted by politicization, coronavirus origin-tracing efforts should build on science-based research. Playing the blame game will not help to resolve the pandemic crisis. As part of the next stage of the virus tracing, it is indispensable to initiate joint origin-tracing across various countries and regions under a global framework.

The author is founder and chairman of the One Country Two Systems Youth Forum. 

The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.