Pompeo: China could have saved hundreds of thousands of lives

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks at a news conference at the State Department on April 29, 2020, in Washington, DC. (AFP)
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Updated 07 May 2020
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Pompeo: China could have saved hundreds of thousands of lives

  • US in new attack on China over coronavirus
  • Pompeo sought to deflect questions about his claim the coronavirus emerged from a Chinese lab

JEDDAH: The US renewed its attack on China on Wednesday for concealing crucial information about the coronavirus pandemic.

President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have both accused Beijing of failing to share data that could have saved lives before COVID-19 took hold.

“They knew,” Pompeo said on Wednesday. “China could have prevented the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people worldwide. China could have spared the world descent into global economic malaise. They had a choice but instead – instead — China covered up the outbreak in Wuhan.”

Pompeo said China was withholding virus samples needed for global vaccine research and rejected suggestions that Washington was being unfair to Beijing. 

“They continue to be opaque, they continue to deny access to this important information that our researchers and epidemiologists need,” he said.

Pompeo’s criticism was the latest example of President Donald Trump’s administration criticizing China for its handling of the COVID-19 disease caused by the new coronavirus, which has infected nearly 3.8 million people and killed more than 260,000 around the world.

Critics believe the administration is seeking to deflect attention from what they see as a slow US response to the disease

Pompeo’s comment on Sunday that there was “a significant amount of evidence” that the new coronavirus emerged from a Chinese laboratory appeared at variance with his own comments last week as well as those of the top US general on Tuesday that it was still unknown where the coronavirus emerged from.

“Let me just put this to bed. Your effort to try to find just — to spend your whole life trying to drive a little wedge between senior American officials ... it’s just false,” he told a reporter, at times talking over her.

“Every one of those statements is entirely consistent. Every one of them. Lay them down together, there is no separation. We are all trying to figure out the right answer. We are all trying to get the clarity.

There are different levels of certainty assessed at different places,” he said. “We don’t have certainty, and there is significant evidence that this came from the laboratory. Those statements can both be true.” 

China said it would invite international experts to investigate the source of COVID-19 when the virus was defeated, and accused the US of politicizing the pandemic.

“The purpose is only deflection of their own failure at this moment to curb the spread of the virus in the US,” said Chen Xu, Beijing’s UN ambassador in Geneva.

“Some of the American politicians, the mindset is a constant problem. They adopted an approach that is against anything from China.”

(With Reuters)

 


UK ex-ambassador quits Labour over new reports of Epstein links

Updated 4 sec ago
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UK ex-ambassador quits Labour over new reports of Epstein links

  • Former prince Andrew, stripped of his royal titles last year over his ties to Epstein, was also named in the files released on Friday

LONDON: Former British ambassador to Washington Peter Mandelson quit the Labour Party Sunday, seeking to avoid causing it “further embarrassment” after newly released US documents revived scrutiny of his connection to late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Mandelson, 72, who was sacked as Britain’s ambassador to the United States last year over his ties to Epstein, allegedly received several payments from Epstein in the early 2000s, according to documents released on Friday by the US Department of Justice and reported in British media Sunday.
“Allegations which I believe to be false that he made financial payments to me 20 years ago, and of which I have no record or recollection, need investigating by me,” Mandelson wrote in a letter to Labour general secretary Hollie Ridley.
“While doing this I do not wish to cause further embarrassment to the Labour Party and I am therefore stepping down from membership of the party,” he added, saying he felt “regretful and sorry about this.”
Bank records released by the US Justice Department suggest Epstein transferred a total of $75,000 (55,000 pounds) in three payments to bank accounts linked to Mandelson between 2003 and 2004.
Speaking earlier Sunday on the BBC, Mandelson said he had no memory of the transfers and did not know whether the documents were authentic.
Mandelson also appears in newly released, undated photographs, wearing a T?shirt and underwear beside a woman whose face has been redacted by US authorities.
He told the BBC he “cannot place the location or the woman and I cannot think what the circumstances were.”
Other documents suggest Epstein sent 10,000 pounds in 2009 to Reinaldo Avila da Silva, Mandelson’s partner, at a time when Mandelson was serving as a government minister.
The former ambassador was removed from his post in September after being appointed by Prime Minister Keir Starmer in late 2024.
Mandelson apologized in January for maintaining his friendship with Epstein, having initially refused to do so on the grounds that he was not complicit.
Former prince Andrew, stripped of his royal titles last year over his ties to Epstein, was also named in the files released on Friday.
A second woman alleged Sunday that Epstein sent her to Britain in 2010 for a sexual encounter with Andrew, her lawyer told the BBC.