Chinese doctor says local officials covered up the scale of the initial outbreak

A leading Chinese disease-control expert has confirmed that Wuhan’s officials did cover up the scale of the initial outbreak.

Professor Yuen Kwok-yung, who visited the former coronavirus epicentre in January to help diagnose cases, told BBC that local authorities destroyed physical evidence and provided ‘slow’ response to clinical findings.  

‘I do suspect that they have been doing some cover-up locally at Wuhan,’ he said. ‘The local officials who are supposed to immediately relay the information has not allowed this to be done as readily as it should.’

Professor Yuen Kwok-yung (pictured), who visited Wuhan in January to help diagnose cases, told BBC that local authorities destroyed physical evidence and provided ‘slow’ response to clinical findings. The expert inspected the former coronavirus epicentre with medical officials

A handout picture from Shenzhen Health Commission shows Prof Yuen (second to the left) discussing the novel coronavirus with Beijing's medical advisors Dr Zhong Nanshan (centre), Dr Li Lanjuan (second to the right) as well as George Gao (right), the head of the Chinese CDC

A handout picture from Shenzhen Health Commission shows Prof Yuen (second to the left) discussing the novel coronavirus with Beijing’s medical advisors Dr Zhong Nanshan (centre), Dr Li Lanjuan (second to the right) as well as George Gao (right), the head of the Chinese CDC

'I do suspect that they have been doing some cover-up locally at Wuhan,' Prof Yuen told BBC in an interview. Pictured, university graduates attend COVID-19 screening in Wuhan on June 11

‘I do suspect that they have been doing some cover-up locally at Wuhan,’ Prof Yuen told BBC in an interview. Pictured, university graduates attend COVID-19 screening in Wuhan on June 11

China has faced widespread scepticism about the authenticity and transparency of its COVID-19 figures. 

This is not the first time the Hong Kong expert has questioned the government’s handling over the coronavirus. 

The 63-year-old microbiologist said in June that the real COVID-19 infection number in the former virus ground zero Hubei could be 2.2million, or 32 times the government’s official toll.  

He and his team from the University of Hong Kong announced the finding after analysing samples from Hong Kong people returning from the province, of which Wuhan is the capital.

But their study was condemned by China’s state media outlets, which questioned if Prof Yuen was helping the United States smear Beijing over the pandemic. 

The renowned microbiologist said in June the real COVID-19 infection number in the former virus ground zero Hubei could be 2.2million, or 32 times the government's official toll. In this February 21, 2020, photo, patients rest at a temporary hospital at Tazihu Gymnasium in Wuhan

The renowned microbiologist said in June the real COVID-19 infection number in the former virus ground zero Hubei could be 2.2million, or 32 times the government’s official toll. In this February 21, 2020, photo, patients rest at a temporary hospital at Tazihu Gymnasium in Wuhan

The Global Times report challenged the motives of Prof Yuen's study, citing a Facebook post written by Stanley Ng Chau-pei, a pro-Beijing politician in Hong Kong. Pictured, a medical worker takes care of a COVID-19 patient at the Union Hospital in Wuhan on April 24

The Global Times report challenged the motives of Prof Yuen’s study, citing a Facebook post written by Stanley Ng Chau-pei, a pro-Beijing politician in Hong Kong. Pictured, a medical worker takes care of a COVID-19 patient at the Union Hospital in Wuhan on April 24

Professor Yuen was involved in the early diagnoses and investigation of the deadly disease in Wuhan.  

He visited the city of 11million on an exploratory mission on January 17 on behalf of China’s National Health Commission. 

He was accompanying Dr Zhong Nanshan, the leader of Beijing’s coronavirus expert team, as well as George Gao, the head of the Chinese CDC, during the trip, reported Chinese news outlet Caixin.

It was this expert group that confirmed the human-to-human transmission of the virus, leading Wuhan to go into lockdown.

China recorded 61 new coronavirus cases on Monday - the highest daily figure since April - propelled by clusters in three separate regions that have sparked fears of a fresh wave. A health worker carries out a COVID-19 test at a makeshift testing centre in Dalian, Liaoning

China recorded 61 new coronavirus cases on Monday – the highest daily figure since April – propelled by clusters in three separate regions that have sparked fears of a fresh wave. A health worker carries out a COVID-19 test at a makeshift testing centre in Dalian, Liaoning

For their study, Prof Yuen and his team collected the blood samples of 452 Hong Kong resident after they returned to the city from Hubei in early March, according to their university

Their research discovered that 17 of them, or 3.8 per cent, carried antibodies against COVID-19.

After applying the antibody rate to the entire population of Hubei, which stands at 58.1million, the team found out that some 2.2million residents should have caught the bug by early March.

Prof Yuen and his team published their study earlier last month on The Lancet Microbe, an open-access journal.  

The official infection figure of Hubei, however, is significantly lower. 

Fourteen domestic cases were recorded in the northeastern province of Liaoning where a fresh cluster broke out in the city of Dalian last week. In this picture taken on Monday, people line up to undergo COVID-19 coronavirus tests at a makeshift testing centre in Dalian

Fourteen domestic cases were recorded in the northeastern province of Liaoning where a fresh cluster broke out in the city of Dalian last week. In this picture taken on Monday, people line up to undergo COVID-19 coronavirus tests at a makeshift testing centre in Dalian

The provincial government said a total of 67,802 had tested positive for the virus as of March 31 while the latest infection figure is 68,135.

This means Prof Yuen’s finding is 32 times higher than the Hubei government’s number either from March or today. 

The researchers’ scientific endeavour was criticised by China’s state-run newspaper The Global Times

The newspaper raised the question if Prof Yuen was ‘the most powerful foreign aid’ for the United States, suggesting that he conducted the study to assist Washington.

The Trump administration has accused Beijing of covering up the true scale of the coronavirus outbreak and the origins of the pathogen – allegations Beijing has firmly rejected.

The Global Times report challenged the motives of Prof Yuen’s study, citing a Facebook post written by Stanley Ng Chau-pei, a pro-Beijing politician in Hong Kong.

Mr Ng accused Prof Yuen of blackmailing authorities by ‘politicising science and public opinion’.

He slammed the scientist for using 400-odd samples to deduce the number of cases of the whole Hubei, instead of resorting to the official figure from the government. 

But his study was condemned by China's state media outlets, which questioned if Prof Yuen was helping the United States smear Beijing over the pandemic

But his study was condemned by China’s state media outlets, which questioned if Prof Yuen was helping the United States smear Beijing over the pandemic. Pictured, a security guard wearing a face shield and mask stands outside a hospital in Beijing, China, on June 15

‘If calculated like this, China has 1.4billion people, so shouldn’t there be 53million infections? If the mainland people can still be so calm and carry on returning to work with such a shocking number, then it is not to demonise but deify the Communist Party,’ Mr Ng wrote on his Facebook account last Friday.

On China’s state-controlled social media platform Weibo, some users have even called Prof Yuen ‘han jian’, a derogatory term for a race traitor to the Han Chinese.

The COVID-19 pandemic was first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

More than 648,900 people have died of the deadly disease worldwide, and over 16million have fallen ill.

The Chinese National Health Commission has reported a total of 83,891 coronavirus infections and 4,634 deaths as of today.  

China records highest new COVID-19 cases since April 

China recorded 61 new coronavirus cases on Monday – the highest daily figure since April – propelled by clusters in three separate regions that have sparked fears of a fresh wave.

The bulk of 57 new domestic cases were found in the far north-western Xinjiang region, where a sudden outbreak in the regional capital of Urumqi occurred in mid-July.

Local infections were also registered in Liaoning and Jilin in north-eastern China while Hong Kong recorded 145 cases today, setting a new daily high for the financial hub.

Local infections were also registered in Liaoning and Jilin in north-eastern China while Hong Kong saw its daily total of cases surpassing 100 for the last five days. This photo taken on July 26 shows a health worker carrying out a coronavirus test on a resident in Dalian, Liaoning

Local infections were also registered in Liaoning and Jilin in north-eastern China while Hong Kong saw its daily total of cases surpassing 100 for the last five days. This photo taken on July 26 shows a health worker carrying out a coronavirus test on a resident in Dalian, Liaoning

Fourteen domestic cases were also recorded in the north-eastern province of Liaoning where a fresh cluster broke out in the city of Dalian last week. 

Two more local cases were found in the neighbouring province of Jilin near the North Korean border – the first since late May. And the last four infections confirmed on Monday were imported from overseas.  

The figure released by China’s National Health Commission today is the highest daily tally of new virus cases since April 14, when 89 cases, mostly imported, were recorded. 

Forty-one of the local infections were found in China’s Xinjiang region with a large population of Uighur ethnic minority.

Its capital city, Urumqi of 3.5million, reported on July 16 its first COVID-19 infection – a 24-year-old female retail worker – in five months. 

People are pictured on Sunday lining up to undergo coronavirus tests at a makeshift testing centre in a car park in Dalian after the city has been hit by a local COVID-19 infection cluster

People are pictured on Sunday lining up to undergo coronavirus tests at a makeshift testing centre in a car park in Dalian after the city has been hit by a local COVID-19 infection cluster

A second wave of mass testing was launched in Xinjiang’s Urumqi on Sunday to detect residents who had previously tested false negative, reported the state-run Global Times, following a mass testing effort earlier this month.

More than 2.3 million people in the city have been tested so far, according to a local press conference Friday.  

Experts still have not confirmed the origin of the recent Xinjiang cluster, which has infected 178 people to date. 

Fourteen native infections were reported in Dalian of Liaoning province, according to the health officials today.

Local authorities have rolled out mass testing for all 6million residents in the major port city to stamp out a fresh COVID-19 outbreak.

Dalian officials last week reported its first local infection in nearly four months, a 58-year-old male employee from a local seafood processing company.

The contagion link from the city’s cluster, which has infected at least 79 people, has extended to eight other cities in four provinces.