HomeNewsOpinionCOVID-19 Origin | The next Wuhan could be anywhere in the world

COVID-19 Origin | The next Wuhan could be anywhere in the world

Back-tracing all the data from the earliest COVID-19 infections to trace the origins of the infection is important. More than scoring political brownie points and pointing fingers, science demands this be done

February 18, 2021 / 08:51 IST
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Security personnel keep watch outside Wuhan Institute of Virology during the visit by the World Health Organization (WHO) team tasked with investigating the origins of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, February 3. (Image: Reuters)
Security personnel keep watch outside Wuhan Institute of Virology during the visit by the World Health Organization (WHO) team tasked with investigating the origins of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, February 3. (Image: Reuters)

Every time we think we have understood COVID-19, it surprises us in a bigger way. Is this the nature’s way to humble us down and ask us to behave?

The first human case of this new series of novel-coronaviruses was formally reported in December 2019 in Wuhan City in Hubei Province in China, presenting as a ‘severe respiratory illness’. It changed the world like very few events have done in the history of mankind. Despite more than one year into investigations, we are still almost clueless what happened where.

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Last year was abuzz with conspiracy theories of a ‘man-made origin’, ‘leakage from Wuhan lab’, ‘genetically modified bio-warfare’ and the like. Come 2021, and the WHO seems to have closed the lid on these.

A delegation of WHO led by Peter Ben Embarek, a Danish Food Scientist, did not find evidence of origin of outbreak to be Wuhan laboratory. However, at the end of their four-week mission on February 9 (of which the first two weeks were spent in quarantine) his team was only partially satisfied with the data provided by Chinese authorities. Despite a minefield of data which helped in understanding spillage and transmission, there were “heated discussions” on the data provided.