A US intelligence report requested by President Biden into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic is inconclusive, US media reports say. Agencies are reportedly divided on whether the virus - first seen in China - was the result of a natural spillover from animals to humans or was caused by a laboratory accident. A summary of the report is expected to be published in the coming days. China's foreign minister has dismissed the report as "anti-science".
Wang Yi said Washington had "ignored and abandoned" research carried out by the World Health Organization (WHO) for a report that would only service its "political purposes". The pandemic, which has claimed more than four million lives around the world, began in the Chinese city of Wuhan in December 2019. While countries have been working to contain the spread of Covid-19, scientists have been trying to work out where the virus originated.
A WHO team, which visited Wuhan, concluded in a report earlier this year that the disease most likely spilled over from an animal sold at a market. The report appears to dismiss the possibility that the virus might have leaked accidentally from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which has studied coronaviruses in bats for more than a decade. This conclusion has been rejected by some scientists. In May President Biden gave the US intelligence agencies 90 days to assess the data and produce a report that "could bring us closer to a definitive conclusion" on the origins of the virus.
Police arrest man who tested positive to Covid and went on the run
Major change for NSW health workers as hospitals struggle with Covid-19