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US agency says Covid 'likely emerged from China lab leak'

However, the White House maintains that American intelligence remains divided on the issue.

AFP
2 minute read
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Patients lie on beds in the emergency department of a hospital, amid a Covid-19 outbreak in Shanghai, China, Jan 5. Photo: Reuters
Patients lie on beds in the emergency department of a hospital, amid a Covid-19 outbreak in Shanghai, China, Jan 5. Photo: Reuters

The coronavirus pandemic likely arose from a Chinese laboratory leak, the US Department of Energy now says according to media, although the White House maintained Sunday that American intelligence remained divided on the issue.

The determination – noted in a classified report by director of national intelligence Avril Haines's office, The Wall Street Journal reported – marks a shift by the energy department, which had previously said it was undecided on how the virus emerged.

People who read the classified report were quoted in the WSJ and The New York Times as saying the department made its judgment with "low confidence," highlighting how different agencies remain divided over the origins of Covid-19 and the pandemic that swept the globe in early 2020.

The conclusion, reportedly the result of new intelligence, is nevertheless significant because the department oversees a network of national laboratories, including some that do advanced biological research.

The department now joins the Federal Bureau of Investigation in believing that the pandemic, which has left nearly seven million people dead, was the result of a mishap in a Chinese laboratory.

Four US intelligence agencies believe Covid occurred through natural transmission, while two others remain undecided, the WSJ reported.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan stressed a "variety of views" on the matter remain.

"Right now, there is not a definitive answer that has emerged from the intelligence community on this question," he told CNN Sunday.

In mid-February, the World Health Organization pledged to do everything possible "until we get the answer" on Covid's origins, denying a report suggesting the agency had abandoned its investigation.

The scientific community sees it as crucial to determine the origins of the pandemic in order to better fight or even prevent the next one.