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In 2020, Peter Dazsak Organised A Letter In Lancet Slamming The Lab-Leak Hypothesis; Today, He Is ‘Recused’ From Journal’s Covid-19 Commission

  • American scientist Peter Daszak who had been listed as a chairman of The Lancet’s task force in December last year, is now recused from the journal’s ‘Commission work on the origins of the pandemic’.

Bhaswati Guha Majumder Jun 23, 2021, 09:23 AM | Updated 09:23 AM IST
Dr Peter Daszak

Dr Peter Daszak


Peter Daszak, an American scientist who spent his whole career discovering dangerous viruses in wildlife as well as in bats and collaborated with the controversial Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV), has been removed from the investigation of the Covid-19 origins team that is being conducted by a panel under the aegis of The Lancet journal.


This information was shared by the Twitter handle called 'The Seeker', which is run by an anonymous Indian. The painstaking work of 'The Seeker', along with those of his colleagues, was instrumental in making the world take the lab-leak hypothesis of SARS-CoV-2 seriously. He tweeted yesterday:

Daszak's organization had worked within China for 15 years along with the WIV, and during the collaborated research, they have studied hundreds of bat viruses. As per the National Institutes of Health's RePORTER website, the medical research agency has provided millions of dollars to the EcoHealth Alliance over the years, including financial support to understand bat coronavirus emergence. But the research with the Chinese lab-raised red flags for officials at the NIH, leading to a suspension of funding towards the WIV's research.

Daszak, who was a key member of the World Health Organization's (WHO) Covid-19 investigation team, had a long working relationship with the now-popular Chinese virologist Shi Zhengli—also known as China's "bat woman". He dismissed the lab leak theory and said that he did not see evidence of a Chinese cover-up, which is another controversial issue according to experts.


In February last year, the lab leak concept was refuted as a conspiracy theory in a letter signed by 27 experts, including Daszak, and it was published in The Lancet. The letter praised China's early response to the Covid-19 outbreak, calling it "remarkable". According to some emails obtained by the US Right to Know, a nonprofit group, Daszak, arranged The Lancet statement condemning the lab-leak hypothesis and sought notable scientists to sign on to it. It is currently unclear if Daszak was recused from the Lancet's Covid-19 origins investigation due to his confidence in China’s role in the early days of the pandemic or because of his constant drive to deny a probable lab leak theory.

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