New York: Chinese scientists refused to share raw data that might bring the world closer to understanding the origins of the coronavirus pandemic, independent investigators for the World Health Organization said on Friday.
The New York Times reported that the investigators who recently returned from a fact-finding trip to Wuhan, China said disagreements over patient records and other issues were so tense that they sometimes erupted into shouts among the typically mild-mannered scientists on both sides.
"If you are data-focused, and if you are a professional, then obtaining data is like for a clinical doctor looking at the patient and seeing them by your own eyes," said Thea Kolsen Fischer, a Danish epidemiologist on the team as quoted by The New York Times.
It was further reported that Chinese officials urged the WHO team "to embrace the government's narrative" about the source of the virus, including the unproven notion that it might have spread to China from abroad, according to several members of the team. The WHO scientists responded that they would refrain from making judgments without data.
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"It was my take on the entire mission that it was highly geopolitical," Dr Fischer said and added, "Everybody knows how much pressure there is on China to be open to an investigation and also how much blame there might be associated with this."
About when the outbreak started, the team said it had not turned up evidence yet that it was earlier than China has reported. "We asked for that on several occasions and they gave us some of that, but not necessarily enough to do the sorts of analyses you would do," said Dominic Dwyer, an Australian microbiologist on the WHO team, referring to the confirmed cases.
"The Chinese scientists also acknowledged they had discovered that 92 people were hospitalized in Wuhan as early as October 2019 with symptoms such as fever and coughing. The Chinese experts said they had found no trace of Covid-19 in those people, but the tests were incomplete," as per the news outlet.