Ordered Labs – Last month Foreign Minister Mike Pompeo

Last month, Foreign Minister Mike Pompeo accused China of censoring its own experts and destroying virus samples to cover up the danger of a pandemic. “Based on extensive research and expert advice, we decided to temporarily treat the cause of pneumonia as a highly pathogenic class II pathogen and established biosafety requirements for sampling, transportation and experimental activities, as well as sample destruction,” the secretary said. Liu said the only reason for China to act was to follow normal practices for handling samples of dangerous viruses, and he said laboratories that do not meet safety requirements should not have samples. Jack Davis is a freelance writer who joined the Western Journal in July 2015 to cover President Donald Trump’s campaign. In addition, Chinese magazine Caixin reported in the same month that at least one company was ordered to destroy the first samples of the virus. A Chinese official admitted on Friday that the Chinese government had ordered the destruction of samples of the coronavirus, citing security and bureaucracy. On Friday, a Chinese official said there were good reasons to destroy the virus samples. The magazine said some hospitals were sending samples to private genetic sequencing companies for analysis in hopes of identifying the virus. Since then, he has been writing a lot for the Western Journal on Trump administration and foreign and military policy issues. “The CPC has yet to release a sample of the virus from inside China to the outside world, making it impossible to track the disease’s progress,” he told reporters April 22. China will work to “further strengthen international cooperation and research and promote the development, production and equitable distribution of OVID-19 vaccines, diagnostic and therapeutic agents,” he said. In February, the provincial health commission issued a warning to unlicensed laboratories to destroy their samples or send them to a major centre. “The statements made by some American officials were taken out of context and should have created confusion,” he said at a press conference in Beijing, the South China Morning Post reported. According to Liu, “professional institutions across the country” were trying to identify the virus that caused the disease when it first affected the population of Wuhan.

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