US should make bio-labs more transparent: Global Times editorial
The novel coronavirus being of natural origin is universally
recognized by scientists worldwide, as the World Health Organization (WHO)
showed there were some 15,000 full genome sequences of the novel coronavirus
available to prove this.
Yet the COVID-19 pandemic has turned the public attention to
biological laboratories as never before, as more and more people wonder whether
lab security measures are effective and whether their presence poses a threat
to human security.
The White House's recent "Chinese lab theory" has
been widely rejected, and even US' allies have distanced themselves from the
groundless slander, despite US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has changed his
tone, admitting the US cannot be certain the coronavirus outbreak originated in
a Wuhan lab.
China is opposed to a culpability investigation that frames
any laboratory in the world with groundless accusations. But we are calling for
a global laboratory safety inspection, with the WHO acting as supervisor.
The US, which has one of the world's largest biotechnology
industries with extensive research realms, is outside a 1972 Biological and
Toxin Weapons Convention (BWC) protocol, approved by some member-states to the
Convention, to increase the transparency of treaty-relevant biological
facilities and activities. The US should respond to the international
community's call for lab transparency
Global concerns rose after the US CDC restored full
operating capability to all US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious
Diseases (USAMRIID) labs at Fort Detrick, Maryland at the end of March after a
shutdown in July 2019 out of safety concerns.
US media quoted the CDC as saying the lab was suspended
because it had no "sufficient systems in place to decontaminate
wastewater" from its highest-security labs. At least the claim reflects
how the safety of the US laboratory is in serious danger.
From 2006 to 2013, labs notified federal regulators of about
1,500 incidents with select agent pathogens, and 15 people contracted
laboratory-acquired infections, according to US newspaper USA Today.
As a country with the strongest scientific strength in the
world, the US has more power to set the agenda around laboratory safety issues,
and has a tendency to use this power for geopolitical purposes. The US ramped
efforts in accusing laboratories in other countries, but ignored domestic
loopholes.
Washington has taken advantage of the scientific resources
and political vacuum left by the collapsed former Soviet Union to set up
biological laboratories in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
countries around Russia that, some suspect, are performing riskier experiments
than those in the US.
Research carried out by those laboratories and their safety
should be the focus of international attention.
The COVID-19 pandemic reveals the dysfunctional governance
system of the US, where some of the key capabilities once considered
world-leading have proven woefully inadequate.
It is reasonable to be highly suspicious that the security
at the US' vast biological laboratories is substandard, and that there are a
lot of "dirty tricks" going on inside for fear that the outside world
will find out.
Through this ongoing outbreak, the international community
should truly regulate biological research in the US and urge it to reach the
basic level of transparency.
The US should not be exempted from international screening
for biological risks, but rather be at the forefront of such inspections. The vast
number of laboratories in the US, with their complex and diverse management
bodies and methods, needs a clean-up test that will reassure the international
community.
US should make bio-labs more transparent: Global Times editorial
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