There
Is A Strong Possibility That New Strains Of Corona Will Spread Globally: The World
Health Organization:
The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that new
strains of the corona virus could spread worldwide, making it harder to control
the epidemic.
According to the French news agency AFP, the emergency
committee of the World Health Organization said on Thursday that the current
situation has made it even more difficult to stop the epidemic.
"The plague is nowhere near over. There is a strong
possibility of a dangerous spread of the corona virus globally and that it
could be even more difficult to control.
On the other hand, the head of the World Health Organization
has demanded that China provide data on the early days of the outbreak.
According to Reuters, the head of the World Health
Organization, Tedros Adhanom, said in a press conference that the lack of data
on the early days of the spread of the virus had hampered the investigation
into the origin of the epidemic.
The head of the World Health Organization called on China to
conduct a transparent investigation into the epidemic.
To determine the origin of the epidemic this year, the WHO
team spent four weeks in Wuhan with Chinese researchers to find out where the
virus originated.
In March, the World Health Organization team said in a joint
report that the virus could have been transmitted from bats to humans through
another animal. The report also said that there was no possibility of the virus
spreading through the laboratory, but many countries, including the United
States, and some scientists were not satisfied with the findings.
Early cases of corona virus were reported in Wuhan, China.
"We demand transparency and independent cooperation from
China in this regard," he said.
China has ridiculed the idea of a laboratory pandemic, and
has repeatedly said that politics would affect the investigation.
World Health Organization (WHO) emergency expert Mike Ryan
said WHR chief Tedros Adhanom would brief 194 member states on the second phase
of the investigation.
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