World

Analysis: How China Influenced the Spread of Four Epidemics

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According to the analysis, for more than two years we experienced a pandemic, which originated from China and specifically from the Wuhan laboratory.

By Miltos Sakellaris

In an extensive analysis of at nypost.com, o Steven Moserwrites about the way China has at times influenced him way of spreading epidemics.

The analyst writes that for more than two years we have experienced a pandemic, which came from China and specifically from the Wuhan laboratory.

According to him, in recent months, many of those who supported Beijing’s original line that the coronavirus came from a … bat cave have now changed their minds. At the same time, there is growing evidence that the coronavirus was developed as part of China’s bioweapons program.

As he writes in his extensive analysis: “The Chinese Communist Party has a long history of covering up epidemics within China and then carelessly – or deliberately – allowing them to spread around the world.”

Prehistory

In the fall of 1957, what became known as the Asian flu broke out. It was first reported in the cities of Singapore and Hong Kong, but this new and deadly flu soon went global. China played no role in its creation—in this case the offending virus was truly of natural origin—but it certainly played a role in its spread. The new flu had emerged in the inland province of Guizhou in early 1957 and had spread throughout China in the following months. But even as tens of thousands of Chinese were dying, the epidemic was kept under wraps by the Communist authorities.

When infected travelers from China later carried the virus to Hong Kong and Singapore, the World Health Organization and other public health authorities were caught off guard. Thanks to Beijing’s infidelity, quarantines and vaccines came too late. Before the Asian flu continued its two-year course, it had killed over a million people.

The same scenario was repeated 10 years later. In 1968, an unknown flu had spread rapidly around the world. It became known as the Hong Kong flu, angering the city’s Chamber of Commerce, whose members were well aware that an epidemic was raging in mainland China, just across the border. Once again, the communist authorities refused to warn the world and millions more died.

China continued to play “hide the virus” when the SARS epidemic broke out in 2002. Patient Zero was a snake seller in Guangdong Province, China who came down with the disease on November 16, 2002. He died shortly afterward, and hundreds of others were soon diagnosed with the disease. Chinese health officials.

According to the analyst in the nypost.com article the communist regime lied about the disease for months, silenced whistleblowers, doctored data, deceived world health authorities and even blamed “external forces” for carrying out a “bioterrorist” attack.

Like the Spanish flu, SARS could easily have killed tens of millions around the world had Canadians not forced Beijing to disclose its existence before it spread beyond its borders. Its containment was aided by the fact that, while highly infectious, it was not airborne. As a result of early detection and its relatively low transmissibility, by the time the SARS epidemic ended in June 2003, a total of only 8,469 cases had been reported.

But the lethality of SARS impressed China’s bioweapons experts, and they began discussing how to genetically engineer a SARS-like coronavirus that could be easily transmitted from person to person. The kind where a single sneeze can contaminate an entire room of people.

In late 2017, a Chinese researcher named Dr. Shi Zhengli, with the help of British zoologist Peter Daszak of the EcoHealth Alliance, a beneficiary of US government funding and an ally of Dr. Anthony Fauci, traced the original SARS virus through an intermediate host. to the original carriers: the cave-dwelling horseshoe bats of Yunnan Province.

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