Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
International

WHO issues call for experts to help with COVID origins probe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2021 10:25 AM
  • WHO issues call for experts to help with COVID origins probe

The World Health Organization has issued a call for experts to join a new advisory group it’s forming, in part to address the agency’s fraught attempts to investigate how the coronavirus pandemic started.

In a statement on Friday, the U.N. health agency said the new scientific group would provide the WHO with an independent analysis of the work done to date to pinpoint the origins of COVID-19 and to advise the agency on necessary next steps. The experts will also provide guidance on critical issues regarding the potential emergence of other viruses capable of triggering outbreaks, such as MERS and Ebola.

The WHO said it’s seeking up to 25 officials with relevant expertise to apply for membership in its new scientific advisory group by September 10.

In March, a WHO-led team of international experts issued a preliminary report that deemed it “extremely unlikely ” that the origins of COVID-19 were linked to a laboratory. Although scientists think it’s most probable that the virus jumped to humans from animals, the theory that a laboratory was involved has gained traction in recent months, with an intelligence review ordered by U.S. President Joe Biden to examine the possibility.

Critics have slammed the WHO's initial assessment, saying it was a flawed effort and noting that all of the team members sent to China needed Chinese government approval, as did the WHO report.

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus acknowledged last month it was “ premature ” to rule out the lab leak theory, describing lab accidents as “common.”

In a Danish documentary released earlier this month, the WHO's team leader said during a trip to China that he was worried about safety standards at a facility close to where the first human COVID-19 cases were detected in Wuhan — concerns that were not previously disclosed by the WHO.

Numerous health experts and scientists have called for an independent investigation to be conducted beyond the WHO, pointing out that the agency has no authority to compel countries, including China, to co-operate.

According to the terms of reference released on Friday, the WHO’s new expert group will also be bound by certain confidentiality rules, similar to those in place for many of the agency's other expert groups.

The guidelines state that members shall not speak on behalf of the WHO or the group to any third party, that internal deliberations should be treated as “strictly confidential” and that they should not quote from or use any documents outside of the group’s remit.

The WHO will retain full control over any reports, including whether or not they will be published.

MORE International ARTICLES

Pakistan Stops Devotees From Visiting India

The decision was taken by the Ministry of Religious Affairs.

Pakistan Stops Devotees From Visiting India

India, Others Must Fight Terrorists In Afghanistan: Trump

Trump also said that the US is holding thousands of IS fighters and now Europe has to take them.    

India, Others Must Fight Terrorists In Afghanistan: Trump

Kartarpur Corridor Will Be Opened In November: Pakistan

The proposed corridor will allow Sikhs to visit the shrine, located only a few km from the border, without visa.

Kartarpur Corridor Will Be Opened In November: Pakistan

Pak Court Rejects Plea By Qandeel Baloch's Parents To Pardon Her Killers

Fouzia Azeem, better known as Qandeel Baloch, was strangled to death at her home in Multan, Punjab province, on July 15, 2016 by her brother Waseem Azeem.  

Pak Court Rejects Plea By Qandeel Baloch's Parents To Pardon Her Killers

PM Modi Holds Talks With French President Emmanuel Macron

Emmanuel Macron explained the historic significance of the chateau to PM Narendra Modi and took him around the centuries-old building.  

PM Modi Holds Talks With French President Emmanuel Macron

Pakistan Will No Longer Seek Talks With India: Imran Khan

Stepping up his criticism of India after it revoked Jammu and Kashmir's special status early this month, Imran Khan told The New York Times that he fears the threat of a military escalation between the nuclear-armed neighbours.  

Pakistan Will No Longer Seek Talks With India: Imran Khan