Chinese Government Imposes Restrictions on Coronavirus Research in Apparent Violation of International Health Regulations

By Published on April 14, 2020

 

  • A Chinese government directive posted by two Chinese universities on Friday ordered that studies relating to the origin of the coronavirus outbreak โ€œmust be strictly and tightly managed.โ€
  • The directive was pulled from the public web hours after it was spotted by CNN on Friday.
  • Republican Rep. Jim Banks of Indiana said Monday the Chinese governmentโ€™s directive violates the 2005 International Health Regulations.

Academic studies from Chinese researchers on the origins of the coronavirus pandemic are subject to strict vetting from the Chinese central government, according to a directive posted by two Chinese universities Friday.

โ€œ[A]cademic papers about tracing the origin of the virus must be strictly and tightly managed,โ€ stated the directive issued by the Chinese Ministry of Educationโ€™s science and technology department.

The directive was removed from the internet hours after CNN first spotted the document on Friday.

โ€œIt is not supposed to be made public โ€” it is an internal document,โ€ an unnamed staffer at the Education Ministry told CNN after confirming it had issued the directive.

Republican Rep. Jim Banks of Indiana said Monday the Chinese governmentโ€™s directive violates the 2005 International Health Regulations, which he said โ€œrequire transparent medical data sharing between & within countries.โ€

A spokesman for Banks told the Daily Caller News Foundation that the tweet was referring to Articles 6 and 10 of the 2005 International Health Regulations, which require World Health Organization member nations to report the โ€œsource and type of riskโ€ of any public health emergency of international concern happening within its territory in a timely manner.

Banks issued a statement Wednesday calling on Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Attorney General William Barr on to bring a criminal case against China for its handling of the coronavirus outbreak to the United Nations International Court of Justice.

The Chinese governmentโ€™s directive requires multiple rounds of vetting for any research related to the origins of coronavirus. Researchers delving into the topic need to have their papers approved by their universityโ€™s academic committee, then the Education Ministryโ€™s science and technology department, and then finally by a task force under the direction of the Chinese State Council, according to CNN.

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One Chinese researcher who spoke with CNN under the condition of anonymity said the restrictions could result in the suppression of any information deemed contradictory to Beijingโ€™s official narrative on the virus.

โ€œI think the importance is that the international scientific community must realize that any journal or manuscripts from (a) Chinese research institution has kind of been double-checked by the government,โ€ the researcher told CNN. โ€œIt is important for them to know there are extra steps between independent scientific research and final publication.โ€

The directive came after two Chinese researchers submitted a paper to Research Gate in early February reporting their belief that the โ€œkiller coronavirus probably originated from a laboratory in Wuhan.โ€

The paper was removed from Research Gate on Feb. 14 or 15, according to internet archives. The paperโ€™s lead researcher, Botao Xiao, told The Wall Street Journal that he withdrew his paper because it โ€œwas not supported by direct proofs.โ€

Republican Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri tweeted Monday that the Chinese directive was proof that its government was โ€œtrying to suppress the truth about the origins of this disease in Wuhan.โ€

The World Health Organization did not immediately return a request for comment.

 

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