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How WHO Became China’s Coronavirus Accomplice

Hamartia Antidote

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https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/04/02/china-coronavirus-who-health-soft-power/

Beijing is pushing to become a public health superpower—and quickly found a willing international partner.

GettyImages-1196986831.jpg

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (left), the director-general of the World Health Organization, shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping before a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Jan. 28

While the novel coronavirus is changing the world, China is trying to do the same. Already a serious strategic rival of the United States with considerable international clout, it’s now moving into a new field—health.

After initial denials and cover-ups, China successfully contained the COVID-19 outbreak—but not before it had exported many cases to the rest of the world. Today, despite the falsehoods it initially passed on, which played a critical role in delaying global response, it’s trying to leverage its reputed success story into a stronger position on international health bodies.

Most critically, Beijing succeeded from the start in steering the World Health Organization (WHO), which both receives funding from China and is dependent on the regime of the Communist Party on many levels. Its international experts didn’t get access to the country until Director-General Tedros Adhanom visited President Xi Jinping at the end of January. Before then, WHO was uncritically repeating information from the Chinese authorities, ignoring warnings from Taiwanese doctors—unrepresented in WHO, which is a United Nations body—and reluctant to declare a “public health emergency of international concern,” denying after a meeting Jan. 22 that there was any need to do so.

After the Beijing visit, though, WHO said in a statement that it appreciated “especially the commitment from top leadership, and the transparency they have demonstrated.” Only after the meeting did it declared, on Jan. 30, a public health emergency of international concern. And after China reported only a few new cases each day, WHO declared the coronavirus a pandemic March 11—even though it had spread globally weeks before.


WHO was keen to broadcast Beijing’s message. “In the face of a previously unknown virus, China has rolled out perhaps the most ambitious, agile and aggressive disease containment effort in history,” WHO experts said in their February report on the mission to China. The country had gained “invaluable time for the response” in an “all-of-government and all-of society approach” that has averted or delayed hundreds of thousands of cases, protecting the global community and “creating a stronger first line of defense against international spread.”

China’s “uncompromising and rigorous use of non-pharmaceutical measures” provides vital lessons for the global response, the WHO report said. Beijing’s strategy “demonstrated that containment can be adapted and successfully operationalized in a wide range of settings.” However, while recommending China’s epidemic control policy to the world, WHO neglected the negative externalities—from economic damage to the failure to treat many non-coronavirus patients, psychological woes, and human rights costs.

It’s not surprising that China’s containment strategy was effective, said Richard Neher, virologist at the University of Basel. “The big lockdown, centralized quarantine, and contact tracing for sure accelerated the decline,” Neher said. Lawrence O. Gostin, director of the WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University, points to “major human rights” concerns with the lockdown techniques pioneered in China and now—to a different degree—adopted in many nations. Gostin recommends standard public health measures like testing, treatment, contact tracing, and isolation or quarantine “as scientifically justified.”

While the rising number of cases elsewhere shows that China isn’t alone in failing in the initial stages of an outbreak, the full story of the Chinese loss will probably never be known—and certainly not recognized by WHO or other bodies.

One reason is that official data from China is often highly dubious—which can lead to ill-advised health policies in other countries, since studies based on information from China are the first used to understand COVID-19. Countless cases of people dying at home in Wuhan—some being described in social media posts—will probably never go into the statistics. And while a report by Caixin on the Chinese province of Heilongjiang said that a considerable percentage of asymptomatic cases has not been reported—which amounts to about 50 percent more known infections in China, according to a South China Morning Post report on classified government data—WHO takes numbers reported by Beijing at face value.

“I thought the greatest success of the Chinese party-state was in getting the WHO to focus on the positive sides of China’s responses and ignore the negative sides of the responses,” said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at the SOAS University of London. “With the WHO presenting China’s responses in a positive light, the Chinese government is able to make its propaganda campaign to ignore its earlier mistakes appear credible and to ignore the human, societal, and economic costs of its responses.”
 
GettyImages-1196986831.jpg


I’ve never seen the Doctor so happy, he is radiating, absolutely chuffed to bits.:lol:

release the Kraken!!!
 
The Western world will have to take some action against WHO and China for what has happened. If they go scot free after inflicting what they have on the rest of the world, especially on the West, then this would effectively signal the end of Western dominance in the world.
 
Last edited:
https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/04/02/china-coronavirus-who-health-soft-power/

Beijing is pushing to become a public health superpower—and quickly found a willing international partner.

GettyImages-1196986831.jpg

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (left), the director-general of the World Health Organization, shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping before a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Jan. 28

While the novel coronavirus is changing the world, China is trying to do the same. Already a serious strategic rival of the United States with considerable international clout, it’s now moving into a new field—health.

After initial denials and cover-ups, China successfully contained the COVID-19 outbreak—but not before it had exported many cases to the rest of the world. Today, despite the falsehoods it initially passed on, which played a critical role in delaying global response, it’s trying to leverage its reputed success story into a stronger position on international health bodies.

Most critically, Beijing succeeded from the start in steering the World Health Organization (WHO), which both receives funding from China and is dependent on the regime of the Communist Party on many levels. Its international experts didn’t get access to the country until Director-General Tedros Adhanom visited President Xi Jinping at the end of January. Before then, WHO was uncritically repeating information from the Chinese authorities, ignoring warnings from Taiwanese doctors—unrepresented in WHO, which is a United Nations body—and reluctant to declare a “public health emergency of international concern,” denying after a meeting Jan. 22 that there was any need to do so.

After the Beijing visit, though, WHO said in a statement that it appreciated “especially the commitment from top leadership, and the transparency they have demonstrated.” Only after the meeting did it declared, on Jan. 30, a public health emergency of international concern. And after China reported only a few new cases each day, WHO declared the coronavirus a pandemic March 11—even though it had spread globally weeks before.


WHO was keen to broadcast Beijing’s message. “In the face of a previously unknown virus, China has rolled out perhaps the most ambitious, agile and aggressive disease containment effort in history,” WHO experts said in their February report on the mission to China. The country had gained “invaluable time for the response” in an “all-of-government and all-of society approach” that has averted or delayed hundreds of thousands of cases, protecting the global community and “creating a stronger first line of defense against international spread.”

China’s “uncompromising and rigorous use of non-pharmaceutical measures” provides vital lessons for the global response, the WHO report said. Beijing’s strategy “demonstrated that containment can be adapted and successfully operationalized in a wide range of settings.” However, while recommending China’s epidemic control policy to the world, WHO neglected the negative externalities—from economic damage to the failure to treat many non-coronavirus patients, psychological woes, and human rights costs.

It’s not surprising that China’s containment strategy was effective, said Richard Neher, virologist at the University of Basel. “The big lockdown, centralized quarantine, and contact tracing for sure accelerated the decline,” Neher said. Lawrence O. Gostin, director of the WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University, points to “major human rights” concerns with the lockdown techniques pioneered in China and now—to a different degree—adopted in many nations. Gostin recommends standard public health measures like testing, treatment, contact tracing, and isolation or quarantine “as scientifically justified.”

While the rising number of cases elsewhere shows that China isn’t alone in failing in the initial stages of an outbreak, the full story of the Chinese loss will probably never be known—and certainly not recognized by WHO or other bodies.

One reason is that official data from China is often highly dubious—which can lead to ill-advised health policies in other countries, since studies based on information from China are the first used to understand COVID-19. Countless cases of people dying at home in Wuhan—some being described in social media posts—will probably never go into the statistics. And while a report by Caixin on the Chinese province of Heilongjiang said that a considerable percentage of asymptomatic cases has not been reported—which amounts to about 50 percent more known infections in China, according to a South China Morning Post report on classified government data—WHO takes numbers reported by Beijing at face value.

“I thought the greatest success of the Chinese party-state was in getting the WHO to focus on the positive sides of China’s responses and ignore the negative sides of the responses,” said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at the SOAS University of London. “With the WHO presenting China’s responses in a positive light, the Chinese government is able to make its propaganda campaign to ignore its earlier mistakes appear credible and to ignore the human, societal, and economic costs of its responses.”

The CCP lies people die.
 
I guess "Foreign Policy" is upset that it didn't broadcast American message of accusing others in order to deflect its own incompetence. Back in January, when China was shuting down entire country and 1.4B people were suffering from potential infection, Americans simply jeered and laughed on social media, at the same time accusing china "severely violated human rights" by "draconian" shutting down entire province. All the while American sat around did nothing, and watching with popcorn that china is suffering extreme severity from the epidemics. After 2 months of doing literally nothing fully watching and knowing how severe the problem was in china, now American is blaming china for its widespread in the US, I mean seriously?
 
I guess "Foreign Policy" is upset that it didn't broadcast American message of accusing others in order to deflect its own incompetence. Back in January, when China was shuting down entire country and 1.4B people were suffering from potential infection, Americans simply jeered and laughed on social media, at the same time accusing china "severely violated human rights" by "draconian" shutting down entire province. All the while American sat around did nothing, and watching with popcorn that china is suffering extreme severity from the epidemics. After 2 months of doing literally nothing fully watching and knowing how severe the problem was in china, now American is blaming china for its widespread in the US, I mean seriously?

Hello, can I ask you are question? How are you posting on the internet? And which country are you from?
 
In the US, the number of COVID numbers are grossly under-counted, as only people with severe symptom are being tested, and that's even after 2 months of outbreak and watching china already suffered through the process and testing kits are readily available? So what makes people think that china, when epidemics first started, was able to correctly test everyone, when at onset it didn't know what the virus was, had no testing kits and hospitals were overwhelmed by patients? US had 2 months head start and it is still under-counting numbers and couldn't control the epidemics, yet you expect china to fully able control it at the beginning when no one knew at the time it was even a new kind of virus? Even if china declared epidemic 2 weeks earlier when first patient was identified, you think it would of made any difference for the US?

Hello, can I ask you are question? How are you posting on the internet? And which country are you from?

Only Google, FB, Youtube and few other sites are blocked in china, 99% of world websites including Yahoo news are accessible in china.
 
In the US, the number of COVID numbers are grossly under-counted, as only people with severe symptom are being tested, and that's even after 2 months of outbreak and watching china already suffered through the process and testing kits are readily available? So what makes people think that china, when epidemics first started, was able to correctly test everyone, when at onset it didn't know what the virus was, had no testing kits and hospitals were overwhelmed by patients? US had 2 months head start and it is still under-counting numbers and couldn't control the epidemics, yet you expect china to fully able control it at the beginning when no one knew at the time it was even a new kind of virus? Even if china declared epidemic 2 weeks earlier when first patient was identified, you think it would of made any difference for the US?



Only Google, FB, Youtube and few other sites are blocked in china, 99% of world websites including Yahoo news are accessible in china.

So how are you posting on the internet? And where are you based?
 
The Western world will have to take some action against WHO and China for what has happened. If they go scot free after inflicting what they have on the rest of the world, especially on the West, then this would effectively signal the end of Western dominance in the world.
Yes here come Bharti riding the back of "west" against China now...can't you fire your bullets yourself?
 
So you are breaking the law in China, isn't it illegal in the CCP?

breaking what law? 99% of world websites are not blocked, meaning they are legally allowed in china, including this website, so what law am I breaking exactly? Just how brain washed by western media are you? People in china access foreign websites ALL THE TIME, only a few, including google, FB, youtube.... are blocked, 99% of world website are legally accessible in china, do you get it now?

Yes here come Bharti riding the back of "west" against China now...can't you fire your bullets yourself?
LOL, Indian dreaming of relying on their western white masters, they are too coward of doing anything themselves. While their western masters are tripping themselves buying all the mask and PPEs from china.
 
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