A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, May 3, 2020
China's 'Bat Woman' Shi Zhengli denies 'trying to defect with confidential files' as bombshell 'Five Eyes' Western intelligence dossier claims country lied about coronavirus transmission and refused to help other countries prepare a vaccine
- China's infamous 'bat woman' coronavirus scientist Shi Zhengli has denied she has defected from the Chinese government
- Rumours have swirled that the origin of Covid-19 is the Wuhan lab where renowned virologist Shi worked
- A leaked 15-page dossier from the 'Five Eyes' intelligence alliance says China's secrecy over the pandemic is an 'assault on international transparency'
- The US, Canada, the UK, Australia and New Zealand intelligence agencies have exposed a series of cover-ups
- It claims Five Eyes found a 'deadly denial of human-to-human transmission'
- Researchers who tried to raise the alarm have been silenced or disappeared and evidence of the outbreak was destroyed, it adds
- Report shows China refused to hand over virus samples to develop vaccines and censored its internet
- China also allegedly censored virus news on search engines from December
- The leaked files show the nations have evidence the virus was leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology
- Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19
China's infamous 'bat woman' coronavirus scientist has denied reports
circulating on social media that she attempted to defect from the
Chinese regime.
Rumors had begun to spread across social media over the past 48 hours
that Shi Zhengli had escaped from China, and brought hundreds of
confidential documents to the U.S. embassy in Paris.
Shi, a renowned researcher of bat-derived coronaviruses, wrote on
WeChat, a Chinese messaging service, on Saturday that she and her family
had never fled the country and had no intention to do so.
This message was reposted by The Global Times, a paper published with approval from the Chinese Communist Party.
Shi said: 'Everything is all right for my family and me, dear friends!' She also posted nine photos of her recent life.
'No matter how difficult things are, it (defecting) shall never happen. We've done nothing wrong.
With strong belief in science, we will see the day when the clouds disperse and the sun shines.'
Despite the The Global Times' ties to the ruling party, the story has
now been republished by South China Morning Post, The Week, and
International Business Times
- Chinese researchers of bat-related viruses studied a sample which had a 96 per cent genetic match to Covid-19 as early as 2013;
- Their 'risky' research found in 2015 that the disease was transmissible from bats to humans;
- Information on asymptomatic carriers of the disease was 'kept silent' by the Chinese state;
- Beijing started censoring search engines in December to stop any internet surfing relating to the virus;
- The World Health Organisation followed China by denying evidence of human-to-human transmission until late January despite concerns raised by neighbouring countries';
- The Five Eyes countries lashed out at China for criticising other countries' flight freezes while simultaneously locking down Hubei Province.

Chinese researcher Shi Zhengli from WIV, CAS, had isolated a SARS-like
coronavirus from the Chinese horseshoe bat, a species widespread in
China and southeast Asia
Shi is a renowned virologist, internationally known for her work with
bat coronaviruses at her lab at the Wuhan Institute of Virology
(WIV). Rumors had previously claimed that Shi had been 'muzzled' by the
government following the initial outbreak amidst the disappearance of
other scientists working in Wuhan at the same time.
The spotlight has fallen on Shi amid concerns that the virus had originated from the Wuhan lab where she worked.
On February 2, Shi denied this saying: 'I promise with my life that the virus has nothing to do with the lab'.
The news comes as a new intelligence document shows China lied about the
human-to-human transmission of coronavirus, made whistle-blowers
disappear and refused to help nations develop a vaccine, a leaked
intelligence dossier reveals.
The 15-page document drawn up by the Five Eyes security alliance brands
Beijing's secrecy over the pandemic an 'assault on international
transparency' and points to cover-up tactics deployed by the regime.
It claims that the Chinese government silenced its most vocal critics
and scrubbed any online scepticism about its handling of the health
emergency from the internet.

China has roundly come under fire for suppressing the scale of its early
outbreak which did not afford other nations time to react before the
disease hit their shores.
Five Eyes - the pooling of intelligence by the US, UK, Canada, Australia
and New Zealand - laid bare its scathing assessment of the Xi Jinping
administration in a memo obtained by the Australian Saturday Telegraph.
The smoking gun file claims to have found evidence the virus spawned in
the Wuhan Institute of Virology, close to the wet market China says it
came from, and unearths 'risky' research on bat-related diseases
stretching back years.
It describes how Beijing was outwardly downplaying the outbreak on the
world stage while secretly scrambling to bury all traces of the disease.
This involved 'destroying' laboratory samples, bleaching wet market
stalls, censoring the growing evidence of 'silent carriers' of the virus
and stonewalling sample requests from other countries.
The secrecy has fanned a clamour in Five Eyes nations for Western
governments to come down hard on Beijing when the pandemic eventually
passes.
Tory MP Bob Seely told MailOnline that 'at the end of this when the dust
settles it is also clear that there has to be a re-evaluation by the
West of its relationship with China'.
In a damning portrayal of a mass cover-up, the bombshell report reveals:

Five Eyes - the pooling of intelligence by the US, UK, Canada, Australia
and New Zealand - laid bare its scathing assessment of the Xi Jinping
(pictured) administration in a memo

A leaked 15-page dossier from the Five Eyes intelligence alliance claims
China's secrecy over the pandemic is an 'assault on international
transparency'. The files show the nations were probing the possibility
the virus was leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology (above)
How the Five Eyes alliances lets the English -speaking countries share intelligence
The Five Eyes alliance is an intelligence-sharing pact among the leading
English-speaking nations: US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
It is one of the most comprehensive pooling of security information in
the world and traces its roots to the Second World War, although it was
formally founded in 1946.
Its cornerstone arrangement is ECHELON - a mammoth surveillance system operated by the US and used by the other members.
Although the group have largely had shared interests - especially during
the Cold War when the Soviet threat level spiked - the agreement has
come under strain.
Britain's decision to sub-contract Chinese telecommunications giant
Huwaei to build part of the 5G network is a sticking point, with the US
voicing concerns and hinting it could jeopardise intelligence sharing.
The Five Eyes dossier paints an alarming image of increasingly
authoritarian powers used by Beijing to hide its disease to the wider
world.
One of the most critical aspects of the report is of China's lack of transparency over how the disease spreads.
The file points to a 'deadly denial of human-to-human transmission' in the early stages of the the outbreak in Wuhan.
Intelligence gathering reveals China had 'evidence of human-human
transmission from early December,' but continued to deny it could spread
this way until January 20.
The World Health Organisation regurgitated Beijing's claims despite
officials in neighbouring Taiwan and Hong Kong raising concerns, the
report says.
Evidence of asymptomatic cases, known as 'silent carriers', was also reportedly buried.
But while the Chinese regime were downplaying the threat of the virus on
the world stage, it was secretly scrambling to vanish all traces of the
epidemic, the intelligence memo claims.
On January 3, China's National Health Commission reportedly ordered
virus samples be destroyed and issued a 'no-publication order' about the
virus.
As part of a mass 'suppression and destruction of evidence', the state
ordered samples of the virus to be destroyed in laboratories while wet
market was bleached to extinguish remnants of the disease.
The report reveals China had started censoring news of the virus on
search engines from December 31, deleting terms such as 'SARS variation,
'Wuhan Seafood market' and 'Wuhan Unknown Pneumonia.'
Anecdotal reports from the time also suggested Beijing's hand in hiding evidence of the then unknown disease from the web.
The document is also scathing of China's downplaying of the need for
other countries to impose travel bans while Beijing officials were
simultaneously quaranteeing Wuhan's 11 million citizens.
Underscoring the regime's hypocrisy, the paper says: 'Millions of people
leave Wuhan after the outbreak and before Beijing locks down the city
on January 23,' according to The Telegraph.
'Thousands fly overseas. Throughout February, Beijing presses the US,
Italy, India, Australia, Southeast Asian neighbors and others not to
protect themselves via travel restrictions, even as the PRC imposes
severe restrictions at home.'

Dr. Shi Zhengli pictured in a lab in 2017. Her research into deadly
bat-derived coronaviruses was cited a key concern by the intelligence,
according to the dossier


Human rights groups believe Mr Fang Bin (right) – along with lawyer Chen
Qiushi and former state TV reporter Li Zehua (left) – are in
extrajudicial detention centers

A Wuhan food market. Australia has maintained the virus most likely came
from the Wuhan live animal market and said there was only a 5 percent
chance it came from the lab. Australia's own connections with the lab
were also documented in the dossier, according to The Telegraph
Dossier suggests China's coronavirus cover up dates back to November 2015
November 9, 2015: Wuhan laboratory announces they have created a new virus from SARS-CoV.
December 6, 2019: The first evidence of human-to-human transmission
occurs when a wife contracts a pneumonia-like disease after her husband
displayed similar symptoms after visiting the Wuhan wet market.
December 27: Beijing announced a new coronavirus which had infected 180 people.
December 31: Chinese state officials start monitoring the internet for searches of the unknown virus.
January 1, 2020: A handful of Wuhan medics raising the alarm bell on the virus are arrested.
January 3: China bans scaremongering about the new virus.
January 10: Chinese official Wang Guangfa insists the outbreak is 'under control'.
January 11: China reported its first coronavirus death.
January 23: Wuhan was put into lockdown.
January 30: The WHO branded the outbreak a global emergency.
February 7: Dr Li Wenliang who spoke out about the virus died after contracting it.
April: Wuhan revises up its cases as other countries wrestle the global pandemic.
Doctors and scientists who tried to raise the alarm about the virus and
China's handling of it have also vanished or been punished, according to
the documents.
Huang Yan Ling, a researcher at the Wuhan Institute of Virology and
thought to be patient zero for the global pandemic, mysteriously
disappeared and her biography was deleted from the lab's website.
The institute has denied she was so-called 'patient zero' and said she is alive but she has not been heard from since.
Other whistleblowers including businessman Fang Bin, lawyer Chen Qiushi
and former state TV reporter Li Zehua are reportedly being held in
extrajudicial detention centers for speaking out about China's response
to the pandemic.
The dossier shows some disagreement among the Five Eyes nations over
whether the virus originated in the Wuhan lab or the wet market, the
Telegraph reported.
It claims the nations were probing the possibility the virus was leaked
from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, with several studies led by
scientist Dr. Shi Zhengli being cited as concerns in the report.
The dossier outlines that Dr Zhengli and her team have conducted
research in the lab into deadly bat-derived coronaviruses, with at least
one of the virus samples being a 96 per cent genetic match
for Covid-19.
Donald Trump has been leading the Western backlash to China, while
Downing Street yesterday said 'there are questions to be answered' of
Covid-19's origins.
This week, Trump said he had seen evidence that coronavirus may have been created in the Chinese lab.
'Yes I have. Yes I have,' Trump said when asked if he had seen proof the virus originated in the institute.
He would not divulge what the evidence was that confirmed his suspicions.
In Britain, Number 10 would not be drawn on the specifics of Mr Trump's
comments but reiterated its desire for an international probe into the
start of the outbreak.
Asked if Boris Johnson agreed with Mr Trump, the Prime Minister's
Official Spokesman said: 'There are clearly questions that need to be
answered about the origin and spread of the virus, not least so we can
ensure that we are better prepared for future global pandemics.
Conservative MP Bob Seely, who sits on the Commons foreign affairs
select committee, told MailOnline: 'There is little doubt that China
misled the world at a critical early phase of Covid-19.
'Its aggression and threats to others now – both to individuals and countries – is an attempt to hide that.
'It is really clear that we need a reappraisal of our relationship with
China. We need to work with China now to solve Covid-19 for the good of
our people and the world.
'But at the end of this when the dust settles it is also clear that
there has to be a re-evaluation by the West of its relationship with
China, both in terms of dependency but also because of the many treaties
and agreements and rules that China broke by keeping silent over the
true nature of the coronavirus, despite the fact that it was in its
early days.
'That breach of trust has come at the cost of tens of thousands of lives
in Europe and throughout the world, and a devastating impact on our
economy and the lives of people in Britain but also in other Five Eyes
and other free states.'
However, Australia has maintained the virus most likely came from the
Wuhan live animal market and said there was only a 5 percent chance it
came from the lab.
Australia's own connections with the lab were also documented in the dossier, according to The Telegraph.
The Telegraph reported that the Australian government trained and funded
key scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, as part of an
ongoing partnership between the CSIRO and the Chinese Academy of
Sciences.
The team members worked in the CSIRO's Australian Animal Health
Laboratory where they carried out research into deadly pathogens in live
bats.
It was revealed in April that the Wuhan Institute of Virology had
received a $3.7million grant from the US government, and had
been carrying out research on bats.


