Friday, April 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

China Omicron claim on Canada 'ludicrous': expert

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2022 01:19 PM
  • China Omicron claim on Canada 'ludicrous': expert

OTTAWA - A claim by Chinese health authorities that the Omicron variant was introduced to a resident of Beijing through a piece of regular mail from Canada is being dismissed as ludicrous.

A Chinese state-controlled news outlet first reported that the Jan. 7 infection of a Beijing resident was the result of receiving a letter or parcel from Canada that passed through Hong Kong.

The Chinese report attributed the possibility of that having happened to the deputy director of the Beijing Centre for Disease Control in a briefing, even though organizations such as the World Health Organization and Canada Post say the risk of contracting coronavirus from a piece of mail is low.

Margaret McCuaig-Johnston, a University of Ottawa China expert who spent more than three decades in the federal public service working on China issues, says it is ludicrous to suggest it could have survived on an envelope or a package that had travelled such a distance through international mail.

McCuaig-Johnston says the Chinese allegation shows that its leadership is still targeting Canada after its long-running dispute over the arrest of high-tech executive Meng Wanzhou in 2018, an extradition case that was dropped last year, which allowed her to return to China.

Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos says he may have his own opinion of why China was making that claim but that he deferred to experts on how COVID-19 can be spread.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

2,859 COVID19 cases for Thursday

2,859 COVID19 cases for Thursday
There are currently 36,641 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 246,693 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 500 individuals are currently in hospital and 102 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

2,859 COVID19 cases for Thursday

B.C. Liberals to review memberships ahead of vote

B.C. Liberals to review memberships ahead of vote
A statement from co-chairs Rozanne Helm and Colin Hansen of the party's election organizing committee says 3,025 memberships are undergoing confirmation reviews before those people will be allowed to vote in the leadership contest.

B.C. Liberals to review memberships ahead of vote

Rainstorms slink out of B.C., leaving few effects

Rainstorms slink out of B.C., leaving few effects
Environment Canada had warned this week's series of rain events would bring deluges of 50 to 150 millimetres over much of southern B.C., but preliminary measurements show conditions were not as intense.

Rainstorms slink out of B.C., leaving few effects

B.C. overdose calls rose by 31 per cent in 2021

B.C. overdose calls rose by 31 per cent in 2021
Paramedics and medical dispatchers in B.C. responded to a record-setting 35,525 overdose calls last year. BC Emergency Health Services says paramedics attended an average of 97 overdose calls a day last year, a 31 per cent increase compared with 2020.

B.C. overdose calls rose by 31 per cent in 2021

Delays increase cost to rebuild Lytton, B.C.

Delays increase cost to rebuild Lytton, B.C.
Insurance losses from a wildfire that wiped out most of Lytton, B.C., have surged to $102 million. The Insurance Bureau of Canada says the amount has risen from an original estimate of $78 million mostly because of delays in rebuilding the village.

Delays increase cost to rebuild Lytton, B.C.

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine
The school board in Delta, B.C., is requiring all its employees to show proof of vaccination for COVID-19 and is giving them less than two months to disclose their status.  Board chair Val Windsor says it is taking the step to reduce the risk of staff and students getting COVID-19.

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine