Author: Sharri Markson
Publisher: HarperCollins, 2021
(First)
ISBN: 9781460761083
Pages: 422
The
sudden onslaught and quick global spread of the Covid 19 virus undermined the
global society’s safety and security in myriad ways. Millions perished, with
thousands not getting basic medical care even in first-world countries. Harsh
lockdowns crippled the economies of many nations. The spread of the disease was
so fast that large chunks of people suddenly fell ill that imposed a heavy cost
on businesses. The virus originated in China but that country tried to hide the
occurrence of this mysterious disease in its midst. By the time evasion was out
of the question, the virus had already spread to other parts of the world. Even
then, it was thought to have originated naturally and diffused through a wet
seafood market in Wuhan. China was believed to be complicit in suppressing
information on the outbreak for obvious reasons. As a few months went by,
scientists were alarmed by the rapid proliferation capacity of the virus. This
was found to be due to a protein that appeared to be perfectly designed to
attack the human respiratory tract. Doubts arose, because the disease
originated near the premises of the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) which
specializes in studying different corona viruses and was known to be involved
in increasing the ferocity of pathogens in order to produce effective vaccines.
This book addresses the question whether the virus had accidentally leaked out
of the lab due to incompetent safety protocols. Sharri Markson is an Australian
journalist and talk show host. She has been at the forefront of breaking news
regarding the origins of Covid 19 pandemic since early 2020. She lives in
Sydney, Australia.
It
must be accepted that China was literally overwhelmed by the early growth rate
of patients. Non-disclosure of the true reason for casualties was enforced on
health workers who were demanded not to talk to media or to express their
opinion on social media platforms. Automated detection systems wiped
objectionable content clean within minutes of their posting. People who
steadfastly insisted on bringing out the truth were taken into custody and
detained. In the meanwhile, dead bodies were piling up, left to decay for days
in hospital corridors because Chinese authorities refused to officially record
any deaths. The bodies were nothing more than a logistical problem for them.
After the initial onslaught was endured, China denied human-to-human
transmission of Covid 19 even though it was known to them for a month.
Markson
narrates the invidious suppression methods unleashed by the Chinese state to
keep the secret under wraps. China shut down domestic travel from Wuhan for
medical concerns, but still allowed international flights to leave the city.
Neither did it advise foreign governments to be aware of the risk of people
returning from Wuhan. News of the virus was first broken by the Program for
Monitoring Emerging Diseases (ProMED) only on Dec 30, 2019. This is galling as
we now know that the outbreak began a full two months back in October of that
year. China had to reluctantly confirm the news and switched on a massive cover
up operation. All mentions of terms such as ‘unknown Wuhan pneumonia’ or ‘Wuhan
seafood market’ were removed from social media. What made this operation so
effective was the readiness with which many western scientists and health
professionals endorsed the Chinese stand. Scholars who had professional links
to virus research in China did not disclose their conflict of interest and
acted like impartial arbiters.
The
author accuses Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) as the institution from which
the virus inadvertently escaped. After some tentative suggestions of biological
warfare and deliberate release, she finally concedes that the escape was due to
some accident. This institute was comparatively new and boasted of Biosafety Level
4 (BSL 4) protocols in place. The institute was set up with French
collaboration and technical support. But after the entity began its operation,
the French experts were unceremoniously kicked out. For an institute doing
research work on corona viruses, it observed substandard and negligent
biosafety practices. US scientists also took part in the research for another
reason. Obama administration banned gain-of-function research on viruses. This
refers to a genetic technique of multiplying a pathogen’s virility many times by
tweaking its genome. So they outsourced their research to China and
specifically to WIV, where lax standards applied. The author confirms that US
public money was funding dangerous projects at WIV which was having no
biosafety standards for handling deadly pathogens. This book also alleges that
the Covid virus, which is exquisitely matched to humans, might be a product of
this collective effort and had been worked on in a lab using humanized mice.
Markson
makes a seething attack on the World Health Organisation (WHO) whose
involvement was lukewarm and partisan to China. It accepted the Chinese
arguments without demur even when they flew in the face of common logic. Unnerved
by procrastination from China, the US, Australia and New Zealand effected a
travel ban on China, but WHO rebuffed them, sanctimoniously advising the
nations to take decisions that are ‘evidence-based’ and ‘consistent’. This book
is a good effort of journalism, but it does not always follow the time-tested
methods in science to ascertain the truth of a proposition. An Australian virus
researcher named Petrovsky found a lab origin for the Covid virus. However, his
paper did not pass the mandatory peer review process which returned the paper
as conspiracy theory. The scientific dictum is that if you can’t convince your
peers that your theory is at least plausible, it probably isn’t. However, the
scholar and the author accuse the scientific community of cover up. Eventually,
he released the paper directly to the general public who are not competent to
evaluate the veracity of his claims. The author must understand that this is
not valid research.
The
book is unnecessarily large for the point it wanted to convey. In spite of this
big arsenal, the author has not been able to convincingly make out the case for
a lab leak and also Chinese military’s involvement in the Wuhan lab for
developing deadly biological weapons. The WIV was built, tested and run with
input and funding from European and American agencies and it is highly
improbable that the institution can do military research without awakening
suspicion in them. It may indeed be probable that the virus leaked out of the
lab but what Markson offers as evidence in support of the claim is just
hyperbole and conjecture. The undue length of the book exhausts the readers, especially
because she could have served her purpose with a volume that is half this size.
The
book is recommended.
Rating:
2 Star
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