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Just more evidence that COVID originated in a Wuhan lab!!
China began developing Covid-19 vaccines in mid-November 2019 before the official start of the outbreak, report by the US Senate claims
A 300-page document, compiled by the US Senate, suggests Chinese researchers started work on a vaccine programme in mid-November of 2019.
It adds to evidence that the country attempted to cover up early infections before the World Health Organisation (WHO) was informed on December 31.
The report also concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a lab leak and was the result of a 'research-related incident' in Wuhan.
And it even suggests there may have been two unintentional spill-over events just weeks apart.
China began developing Covid-19 vaccines in mid-November 2019 before the official start of the outbreak, report by the US Senate claims
By Xantha Leatham
01:26 BST 20 Apr 2023 , updated 04:18 BST 20 Apr 2023
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The report concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a Wuhan lab leak
It adds to evidence that the country attempted to cover up early infections
It suggests there may have been two unintentional spill-over events weeks apart
China began developing Covid-19 vaccines before the official start of the outbreak, a new report claims.
A 300-page document, compiled by the US Senate, suggests Chinese researchers started work on a vaccine programme in mid-November of 2019.
It adds to evidence that the country attempted to cover up early infections before the World Health Organisation (WHO) was informed on December 31.
The report also concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a lab leak and was the result of a 'research-related incident' in Wuhan.
And it even suggests there may have been two unintentional spill-over events just weeks apart.
A 300-page document, compiled by the US Senate, suggests Chinese researchers started work on a vaccine programme in mid-November of 2019. Security personnel keep watch outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology during a visit by the WHO in 2021
A 300-page document, compiled by the US Senate, suggests Chinese researchers started work on a vaccine programme in mid-November of 2019. Security personnel keep watch outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology during a visit by the WHO in 2021
It adds to evidence that China attempted to cover up early infections before the World Health Organisation (WHO) was informed on December 31. Pictured: Two staff members cross a road as they deliver vegetables to a hospital in Wuhan, 2020
It adds to evidence that China attempted to cover up early infections before the World Health Organisation (WHO) was informed on December 31. Pictured: Two staff members cross a road as they deliver vegetables to a hospital in Wuhan, 2020
The report concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a lab leak and was the result of a ¿research-related incident¿ in Wuhan. Pictured: The P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in 2020
+6
View gallery
The report concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a lab leak and was the result of a ¿research-related incident¿ in Wuhan. Pictured: The P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in 2020
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The document, which was released to US news website Axios, is the full version of a 35-page summary published in October by the Senate Health, Education, Labour and Pensions Committee.
It said: 'The Covid-19 pandemic was, more likely than not, the result of a research-related incident.
'New information, made publicly available and independently verifiable, could change this assessment.
'However, the hypothesis of a natural zoonotic origin no longer deserves the benefit of the doubt, or the presumption of accuracy.'
One section of the report focuses on China's vaccine development.
Investigations by the committee show a team led by Professor Yusen Zhou, from the Academy of Military Medical Sciences, filed a patent for a Covid-19 vaccine on February 24, 2020.
Experts interviewed by the investigators said it would have taken at least two to three months to reach this stage – suggesting work must have started in November 2019, one month before China publicly released details on the virus.
The report reads: 'This investigation found evidence that China began SARS-CoV-2 virus vaccine development no later than November 2019.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...es-official-start-outbreak-report-claims.html
Just more evidence that COVID originated in a Wuhan lab!!
China began developing Covid-19 vaccines in mid-November 2019 before the official start of the outbreak, report by the US Senate claims
A 300-page document, compiled by the US Senate, suggests Chinese researchers started work on a vaccine programme in mid-November of 2019.
It adds to evidence that the country attempted to cover up early infections before the World Health Organisation (WHO) was informed on December 31.
The report also concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a lab leak and was the result of a 'research-related incident' in Wuhan.
And it even suggests there may have been two unintentional spill-over events just weeks apart.
China began developing Covid-19 vaccines in mid-November 2019 before the official start of the outbreak, report by the US Senate claims
By Xantha Leatham
01:26 BST 20 Apr 2023 , updated 04:18 BST 20 Apr 2023
+6
View gallery
185
shares
412 comments
The report concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a Wuhan lab leak
It adds to evidence that the country attempted to cover up early infections
It suggests there may have been two unintentional spill-over events weeks apart
China began developing Covid-19 vaccines before the official start of the outbreak, a new report claims.
A 300-page document, compiled by the US Senate, suggests Chinese researchers started work on a vaccine programme in mid-November of 2019.
It adds to evidence that the country attempted to cover up early infections before the World Health Organisation (WHO) was informed on December 31.
The report also concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a lab leak and was the result of a 'research-related incident' in Wuhan.
And it even suggests there may have been two unintentional spill-over events just weeks apart.
A 300-page document, compiled by the US Senate, suggests Chinese researchers started work on a vaccine programme in mid-November of 2019. Security personnel keep watch outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology during a visit by the WHO in 2021
A 300-page document, compiled by the US Senate, suggests Chinese researchers started work on a vaccine programme in mid-November of 2019. Security personnel keep watch outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology during a visit by the WHO in 2021
It adds to evidence that China attempted to cover up early infections before the World Health Organisation (WHO) was informed on December 31. Pictured: Two staff members cross a road as they deliver vegetables to a hospital in Wuhan, 2020
It adds to evidence that China attempted to cover up early infections before the World Health Organisation (WHO) was informed on December 31. Pictured: Two staff members cross a road as they deliver vegetables to a hospital in Wuhan, 2020
The report concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a lab leak and was the result of a ¿research-related incident¿ in Wuhan. Pictured: The P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in 2020
+6
View gallery
The report concludes that the pandemic most likely came from a lab leak and was the result of a ¿research-related incident¿ in Wuhan. Pictured: The P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in 2020
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5k viewing now
ANOTHER Congressional report says COVID leaked from a lab
539 viewing now
The document, which was released to US news website Axios, is the full version of a 35-page summary published in October by the Senate Health, Education, Labour and Pensions Committee.
It said: 'The Covid-19 pandemic was, more likely than not, the result of a research-related incident.
'New information, made publicly available and independently verifiable, could change this assessment.
'However, the hypothesis of a natural zoonotic origin no longer deserves the benefit of the doubt, or the presumption of accuracy.'
One section of the report focuses on China's vaccine development.
Investigations by the committee show a team led by Professor Yusen Zhou, from the Academy of Military Medical Sciences, filed a patent for a Covid-19 vaccine on February 24, 2020.
Experts interviewed by the investigators said it would have taken at least two to three months to reach this stage – suggesting work must have started in November 2019, one month before China publicly released details on the virus.
The report reads: 'This investigation found evidence that China began SARS-CoV-2 virus vaccine development no later than November 2019.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...es-official-start-outbreak-report-claims.html