Covid lab leak theory blows wide open – leaked documents show samples WERE sent to Wuhan

Wuhan lab researchers handle bats in 2017 promo footage

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The leaked documents add more weight to the theory that the deadly pathogen leaked from Wuhan’s Institute of Virology. Campaigners say Wuhan scientists were studying viral samples of high-risk bat species living in Laos. This has drawn a link between a pathogen that is a close relative to COVID-19 that was found in Laos and the research performed at the Wuhan laboratory.

The documents suggest that in September scientists discovered a viral strain called Banal-52 in Laos.

This coronavirus strain shares 96.8 percent of its genome with COVID-19.

Now questions surround how a bat-borne virus from Laos could have ended up sparking an outbreak in Wuhan, which is more than 1,000 miles away.

Leaked emails between scientific research foundation EcoHealth Alliance and US government funders show viral samples were being actively collected from bats in Laos.

These samples were then taken back to the Wuhan Institute of Virology for study.

The emails between EcoHealth Alliance and the US government funders suggest that viral DNA from “bats and other high-risk species” were sent to Wuhan between June 2017 to May 2019.

This information was uncovered in a Freedom of Information Request by the US-based White Coat Waste Project.

A coronavirus variant, called Banal-52, was discovered in cave bats in Yunnan, China, where EcoHealth Alliance had also been looking for viruses.

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The Yunnan cave bat samples were sent back to the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

The samples from both Yunnan and Laos were kept in an online database at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

The co-author of Viral: The Search for the Origin of COVID-19, called Viscount Ridley, said the emails added more weight to the theory that the deadly pathogen leaked from a lab in Wuhan.

Speaking at the Institute of Economic Affairs in London, Viscount Ridley said: “Banal-52 is not close enough to be the progenitor, it’s still not the smoking gun, but it’s pretty good.

“So maybe this virus started in Laos, not China.

“Interesting possibility.

“But we got a leak of a document showing that the EcoHealth Alliance was sampling bats in Laos.

“They say in the document that because it would be complicated to come back and ask the US Government for permission to give some of the grant to a Laotian lab, they’d like to send all these samples to a lab that can analyse it for them.

“It was in a place called Wuhan.

“So the outbreak happened in a city with the world’s largest research programme on bat-borne coronaviruses, whose scientists had gone to at least two places where these Sars-CoV-2-like viruses live.”

Referring to the new information, Gilles Demaneuf, a researcher and member of the web pandemic origins group Drastic, wrote in a recent blog: “Now we have a very plausible direct route from Laos to Wuhan, a route with two options.

“Number one, a Wuhan bat sampler infected on a field sampling trip.

“Number two, a research accident in Wuhan when manipulating a Laos Banal-like bat coronavirus.”

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