Source
Global Research, January 31,
2020
Region: Asia
Theme: Science and Medicine
While this coronavirus is
indeed serious and is causing deaths, one wonders if the responses, especially
in the West, are reaching out of control.
Canada, with a population
about the same as Shanghai, has so far this flu season had more than 20,000
confirmed cases, 2,200 hospitalisations, and 85 deaths, roughly the same as all
of China with the new corona virus at the same time. But there is no panic in
Canada about the flu, and United Airlines isn’t cancelling all flights to
Canada.
By the same token for the US
in this flu season, there have been 140,000 hospitalisations and about 8,500
deaths.
But the flu barely rates a
mention in the US media and the government is not shuttering cities or air
travel. Even more, in 2017, the US recorded 61,000 fatalities from the flu with
45 million becoming very ill, yet there was no national emergency cited and
life remained normal. (1)
Infection
History (December 31, 2019 – January 31, 2019
- December
31 – 1
- January
03 – 44
- January
21 – 225
- January
23 – 830
- January
24 – 1,295
- January
25 – 1,950
- January
26 – 2,744 infections, 80 deaths
- January
27 – 4,515 infections, 105 deaths
- January
28 – 5,974 infections, 132 deaths
- January
29 – 7,711 infections, 170 deaths
- January
30 – 9,692 infections, 216 deaths
- January
31 – 9,800 infections, 216 deaths
Source: Chinese Government
and World Health Organization data
See
Map Below
scan of NYT map, January 31st
Approximately 100
infections have been recorded outside China in 20-21 countries out
of a total of recorded infections of the order of 10,000 (January 31st).
Sofar all recorded deaths
are in mainland China. Not a single death has been recorded outside China.
These numbers are low when
compared to those pertaining to the common seasonal virus flu outbreak.
According to WHO data, there
were 5 million infections and 650,000 deaths Worldwide associated with the
common seasonal flu virus. (2017 figures)
In Hong Kong, there are more
deaths every two weeks from the regular flu each year (and this year) than
occurred with SARS in total, but with only 6 confirmed coronavirus cases, Hong
Kong is shutting down most flights and trains between the Mainland and has
closed many of its border ports of entry.
In Mainland China, the new
virus has now caused more infections than did SARS during 2002-2003, although
the death rate is much lower, but 200 or 300 deaths in a population of nearly
1.4 billion is not immediately reminiscent of the plague or the Spanish flu,
both of which caused millions of deaths around the world.
And indeed China as well
experiences many more deaths from the simple flu each year, yet China has
allocated nearly 30 billion RMB (about US$4 billion) to support the battle
against this novel coronavirus. The fear and the over-reaction (if
indeed it is such) appear to stem simply from the fact that this pathogen is
new.
Train travel during this
holiday was down by about 75% from the same period last year. China extended
the country’s New Year holiday in an attempt to permit citizens to remain
isolated at their homes for a longer period, but there will soon be a large
wave of travelers returning to their place of residence or work, with the
dangers of further infections.
Airlines from numerous
countries announced the reduction or full cancellation of all flights to China,
and Russia, Mongolia and North Korea blocked all crossings into China until
March 1, Russia effectively closing its 4,200 Km border. The US and many other
nations have recommended the avoidance of any travel to China. As well, many
businesses in China have elected to temporarily close their doors, including
Starbucks and McDonald’s, IKEA and others. (2)
The Italian government
declared a state of emergency in an effort to “allegedly” prevent the spread of
the coronavirus strain after two cases were confirmed in Rome. Italy, Air
France, Delta Airlines, Air Canada, British Airways, Lion Air and Seoul Air,
Finnair, Cathay Pacific and Jetstar Asia have suspended all flights to and from
China. Several other airlines including were reducing the number of flights to
the country as demand for travel drops.
Many nations have now
evacuated most of their diplomatic staff from China, including the US, France
and Japan.
Australia said it would
quarantine suspected infections for two weeks on a small island about 1,600 Kms
from its mainland, and Singapore has barred all travelers who have visited
mainland China during the past two weeks. (3) Elsewhere, more than 6,000
tourists were under lockdown aboard a cruise ship at an Italian port on
Thursday after two Chinese passengers from Macao were isolated over fears they
could be carrying the coronavirus. (4)
The WHO Declared a Global
Emergency
On January 30, the WHO
declared the virus outbreak as a global emergency, an “extraordinary event”
that constitutes a risk to other countries and requires a coordinated
international response. This
was prompted by the rapid rise in reported infections, especially having spread
to 18 other nations where there were cases of human-to-human transmission.
France confirmed that a doctor who was in contact with a patient with the new
virus later became infected himself, and medical specialists worry that the
spread of new viruses from patients to health workers can signal the virus is
becoming adapted to human transmission and thus become much more infectious.
(5)
The WHO Director-General
said the declaration was not a vote of non-confidence in China, nor what was
happening in China, but because of what is happening in other countries, and
that “Our greatest concern is the potential for this virus to spread to
countries with weaker health systems which are ill-prepared to deal with it.”
Marion Koopmans, an infectious diseases specialist at Erasmus
University Medical Center in the Netherlands and a member of WHO’s emergency
committee wondered if the virus was “more infectious than previously thought or
if there was something unusual in those circumstances”. Another virologist
suggested the transmission was easier than initially assumed, stating that “If
transmission between humans was difficult, then the numbers would have
plateaued”. Another medical officer stated that this new virus “has spread at
unprecedented scale and speed, with cases passing between people in multiple
countries across the world.”
There were Western media
reports that Wuhan medical authorities had been arrested for breaking the news
about the virus, but those claims were not true. What did happen was that some
unrelated individuals circulated online comments that SARS had returned to
China and had been detected in Wuhan’s hospitals, which claim rattled a great
many people. The police did interview them because spreading unfounded or false
rumors that upset public stability is a crime in China. However these 8
individuals were released and later commended because their evidence proved to
be essentially correct even though, as the chief epidemiologist at the CCDC
stated, they “lacked scientific evidence”. In fact, China’s Supreme Court
issued a statement on this, saying “Facts show that, although the novel
coronavirus-infected pneumonia was not SARS, information released by the eight
people was not entirely fabricated.” (6)
In a surprising move, the
mayor of Wuhan, Zhou Xianwang said that the public were
initially unsatisfied with the speed of information disclosure, and that the
rapid effective lockdown of the city was upsetting to many people. He said,
“I hope the public can
understand that it’s an infectious disease, and . . . It’s unprecedented to
lockdown a city with more than 10 million people. However, faced with the
current situation, we’ve closed the city gate and possibly besieged the virus
within the city. We might leave a bad name in history.”
He then stated “But if it’s
conducive to the control of the virus and the protection of the safety of the
people”, both he and the party chief in Wuhan would resign if that would
appease any existing indignation. (7) Typically, Hong Kong’s South China
Morning Post (an anti-Mainland publication) twisted the story to read “Wuhan
mayor under pressure to resign over response to virus”, when in fact there was
no outside pressure. (8)
It was heartwarming that
privately-owned Chinese hotels in Wuhan voluntarily provided free rooms for
medical staff needing rest. Xiao Yaxing, the private owner of a
four-star hotel in the city, opened a discussion group on Chinese social media
platform WeChat where he appealed to his peers from more than 40 hotels to
offer rooms for doctors and nurses who were working day and night to save
lives. He said that since nearly all transportation had ceased in the large
city, it was difficult for the medical staff to get to hospitals from home and
needed rest places as well. Xiao said “Many hotels in Wuhan are shut down for
travelers, leaving a lot of empty rooms that we can offer for free.” (9)
China’s state-owned
enterprises also mobilised their resources to combat the outbreak of pneumonia
caused by the novel coronavirus. The nation’s major telecom operators initiated
emergency responses to ensure effective communications in Hubei Province, and
SOE pharma companies have made extreme efforts to accelerate production of test
kits and medical appliances, as well as working around the clock to develop
vaccines against the virus. (10)
And of course, every silver
lining has a cloud. Retail giants Carrefour and Wal-Mart are being fined
millions of RMB for illegal price-gouging, profiteering frauds, and “otherwise
cheating” their customers during this crisis, both having apparently been
warned in advance only a few days prior by the authorities and both firms ignoring
the warnings. It must be said that both Carrefour and especially Wal-Mart have
a long history in China of various kinds of fraudulent practices. A few years
ago, all the Wal-Mart stores in Chongqing Province were shuttered and six top
executives arrested for a massive public fraud, with the company receiving a
heavy fine. (11)
As an example in this
instance, one branch alone of Carrefour in Shanghai had taken advantage of the
public anxiety to mark up their regular vegetable prices from (for example) 2.5
RMB to 19.8, from 3.87 to 19.55, and from 4.26 to 18.33, while their
procurement costs had remained stable. The authorities discovered that both
Carrefour and Wal-Mart had been further cheating customers with false prices or
misleading tags but charging 30% to 50% more at the check-out. These price
frauds occurred in many stores in many provinces by both firms. (12)
Carrefour China apologized
for any pricing irregularities and said the company would establish “a special
control group to conduct internal price quality inspections”. Wal-Mart for its
part also issued a statement saying it would “strengthen efforts on price
inspections and treat any problems extremely seriously”. However, these are the
same statements these two companies make each time they are caught and fined
for fraudulent practices. (13)
Some Troubling Background
Each of these items below,
and indeed all of them together, might be dismissed as mere coincidences. It is
too early to form conclusions, but these facts and events have startled and
alarmed some people from their topical relevance and their correspondence in
terms of time.
Part of the unsettling
nature of these events is that many tragedies in the world in recent times have
had ‘trial runs’, with the authorities conducting simulated events that
uncannily resembled the real event which took place shortly afterward. The
Boston Marathon bombing in the US a few years ago was one such event, where
hundreds of citizens testified that what appeared to be FBI agents carried out
precisely such a simulation only days before the actual bombing took place.
There are many such, and all well-documented, though the mass media avoided all
discussion of them.
Chinese officials initially
believed the virus originated at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan,
but say it now appears now that there were multiple sources of the
infection. Huang Chaolin, a Chinese pulmonary disease specialist,
vice director of Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital, revealed some early findings on the
clinical data of the first 41 novel coronavirus cases. In a new published paper
in the Lancet, he said that four of the first five cases had no contact with
the seafood market and that only 27 of the first 41 cases had such exposure.
“Judging from the whole situation, the seafood market may not be the only
source. The origin of the novel coronavirus might be multi-source.” (14)
While a few Caucasians and
other Asians have been infected to date, the virus so far appears to still be
tightly focused to Chinese. In my previous article on this virus, I referred to
a thesis on Biological Weapons by Leonard Horowitz and Zygmunt Dembek who
stated that clear signs of a genetically-engineered bio-warfare agent were (1)
a disease caused by an uncommon (unusual, rare, or unique) agent, with (2) lack
of an epidemiological explanation, i.e. no clear idea of source; (3) An
“unusual manifestation and/or geographic distribution”, such as
race-specificity; and (4) “multiple sources” of infection. This case now has
all four. (15)
There is another matter
involving racial susceptibility to this 2019-nCov infection disease. A group of
Chinese virologists discovered that at least some Chinese have an extremely
large number of a particular kind of cell in their lungs, which relate to
regulating both viral reproduction and transmission. They claimed this as the
appropriate “biological background for the epidemic investigation of the
2019-nCov.” (16) (17)
Another strange occurrence
was around two years ago when the US Air Force placed a listing on the Federal
Business Opportunities website asking for at least 12 RNA samples from Russian
people of a European ancestry, as well as 27 samples of Russian synovial fluid.
The contract stated that all samples must be “collected from Russia and must be
Caucasian. The Government will not consider tissue samples from Ukraine”. (18)
Igor Nikulin, a former member of the UN commission on biological
weapons, noted that the RNA samples can be used to develop viruses.
“New types of biological
weapons are being developed. There’s nothing else that could possibly interest
the military department. Most likely, they are weaponised viruses. The US is trying
to develop various types of biological weapons specifically for specific
carriers of this gene pool, and Caucasoids are needed since they constitute the
majority of the population of our country. This is the same focus group for
which they are trying to find the samples. It’s necessary for the viruses to
act selectively on one or another ethnic group.”
Wuhan was holding the World
Military Games just a few weeks prior to the outbreak of the virus, with a huge
foreign contingent present. 300 US military personnel arrived in Wuhan for
these Games which lasted into November, not long before the infections began.
There is no proven link between these two, but merely questions which arise
from the timing. (19) (20)
In October of 2019, the Bill
and Melinda Gates Foundation co-hosted a pandemic exercise with the Johns
Hopkins Center for Health Security, in conjunction with the UK’s Pirbright
Institute, using precisely such a novel corona virus outbreak. I00 was called
“Event 201”, and was a simulation exercise that envisioned a fast-spreading
coronavirus with a devastating impact. In their simulation, the coronavirus
resulted in a death toll of 65 million people within 18 months – surpassing the
deadliest pandemic in history, the 1918 Spanish flu. (21)
The organisers were saying,
“Efforts to prevent such
consequences or respond to them as they unfold will require unprecedented
levels of collaboration between governments, international organizations, and
the private sector.”
In their narrative,
“the immune-resistant virus
was crippling trade and travel, sending the global economy into freefall.
Social media was rampant with rumors and misinformation, governments were
collapsing, and citizens were revolting.” They claimed this scenario was
“utterly realistic”.
Aside from the coincidence
with a virtually identical breakout in China, perhaps the most revealing part
was the group’s focus on the necessity of “deep coordination with the ‘private’
sector” because, in their words, “vaccine development is slow and difficult if
there isn’t an immediate market for it.” Comments of this kind unfortunately
raise immediate questions.
Another serious matter is
the Pirbright Institute itself which assisted in the above
simulation. The Pirbright Institute is one of the UK’s two major bio-weapons
labs, the other being Porton Down. It was from Pirbright that foot and mouth
disease viruses “escaped” twice in recent years, devastating the small farmers
by killing all the cattle and that resulted in UK farming suddenly being taken
over by big agra.
This so-called institute has
what must surely be the worst record of safety, of ethics, and of story-telling
ability among the entire world’s Level 4 biolabs. For background, a Level 4 lab
is perhaps the most secure place on earth. No unauthorised person can even approach,
much less enter, and an exit requires, among other things, stripping naked for
decontamination. Nothing, no materials can be removed from the site, for
obvious reasons, without a police or military escort. However, when the foot
and mouth disease ravaged England and the source was definitively traced to
Pirbright, their response was that “animal activists” had entered the lab and
stolen some vials of pathogens and released them. The great majority of
English, unfamiliar with the technical features of biolabs, probably believed
the story which was pure fantasy.
A related issue is that
Pirbright’s presence at the simulation was no doubt due to the fact that they
have created and patented several (five, I believe) coronaviruses, one of which
was used in the simulation – US Patent # 10,130,701 issued November 20, 2018.
It is curious that Pirbright is partially funded by the Gates Foundation (a
“primary funder”), leading one to wonder why Bill Gates would be financing a UK
bioweapons lab. We are told the interest is in vaccines, but a biolab that
creates and patents lethal pathogens could avoid the cost of vaccine research
by not creating the pathogens in the first instance. Pirbright own the patents
for five different new kinds of corona viruses, but have also created and
patented a wide range of other pathogens, including (with funding from Gates)
“engineered Mosquito Genes” (weaponising insects, in fact), which some believe
was the original source of Oxytech’s mosquitoes that released the Zika virus. (22)
(23)
Then in late January, Netflix
released a new documentary called ‘Pandemic: How to Prevent an Outbreak’,
which alarmed many people with the coincidence of it being released just as the
coronavirus is spreading worldwide.
Some dismissed this as an
elaborate publicity stunt, but its contents are too detailed and too linked to
China’s coronavirus to be an accident. The series examines the worldwide
healthcare system, discussed possible sources of viruses that could cause a
worldwide pandemic, and examines humanity’s ability to cope. Given that the
documentary required some time for production, many worried citizens on the
Internet are asking if Netflix had prior knowledge. It is an alarmist
documentary, encouraging the public to be “most scared of influenza and
respiratory (corona) viruses, with phrases like “Pandemic Is Now”, “Seek Don’t
Hide”, “Prayers Might Work”. It too focuses on the ‘private sector’ as the
world’s savior with privately-produced (and for-profit) vaccines. (24)
(25) (26)
In another disparaging
article, CNN claims, “historically a mass quarantine is an aggressive response
that’s far from perfect. In the past it has led to political, financial and
social consequences.”
Lawrence Gostin, a professor of global health law at Georgetown
University and director of the WHO’s Center on Global Health Law, said the move
was “unprecedented,” and, he thought, “very unwise.” “Nothing on this scale has
ever been tried,” he told CNN. “There’s very little evidence of its
effectiveness. And I think there’s good reason to think that it could backfire,
from a public health, social, human rights perspective.”
CNN claims they can lead to
“logistical issues”, that merely the word “quarantine” will cause panic
and hysteria. Apparently there are also “human rights implications”,
one US expert stating, “I don’t think you can enforce a mass quarantine of 30
million people without violating human rights.” The same expert claimed it
could easily spur public violence and a distrust of health authorities, and
that there will be broad “financial and social consequences” and will “hinder
local economic activity”. Gostin then claimed that “Getting the buy-in from the
people you’re protecting is essential,” he said, “and always better than
ordering people to do stuff.”
It would seem that, for
China, you are damned if you do and damned if you don’t. (27)
Other media and internet
posters regularly insinuate or claim that the new coronavirus “leaked from the
Wuhan bio-weapons lab”, yet another example of writers making claims while
lacking any close personal acquaintance with the facts. The University of Wuhan
contains The Wuhan Institute of Virology, which is one of the country’s premier
biosafety laboratories which works with the WHO and other international groups as
part of a large network studying pathogens from all over the world, as do all
other such institutes. I have seen many insinuations or accusations of the
Institute being a bio-weapons lab, but those are claims made with no supporting
evidence. I am generally aware of the Institute, and it is purely a civilian
operation. It has never been associated with biological military or combat
research.
*
Larry Romanoff is a retired management consultant and
businessman. He has held senior executive positions in international consulting
firms, and owned an international import-export business. He has been a
visiting professor at Shanghai’s Fudan University, presenting case studies in
international affairs to senior EMBA classes. Mr. Romanoff lives in Shanghai
and is currently writing a series of ten books generally related to China and
the West. He can be contacted at: 2186604556@qq.com. He is a frequent contributor to Global Research.
Notes
(4) https://www.afp.com/en/news/15/thousands-held-liner-italy-over-virus-fears-china-couple-doc-1oj72z2
(6) http://english.www.gov.cn/statecouncil/ministries/202001/30/content_WS5e327e60c6d019625c604324.html
(9)
en.people.cn/n3/2020/0125/c90000-9651777.html
(10)
https://global.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202001/25/WS5e2b76faa3101282172732ab.html
(14) Shanghai Daily,
Wednesday, January 29, 2020; https://www.shine.cn/news/nation/2001290806/
(15) Medical Aspects of
Biological Warfare; https://repository.netecweb.org/items/show/325
(21) http://www.centerforhealthsecurity.org/newsroom/center-news/2020-01-17-Event201-recommendations.html
The original source of this
article is Global Research
Copyright © Larry
Romanoff, Global
Research, 2020
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