Australia demands coronavirus enquiry, adding to pressure on China
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Lidia Kelly
4-5 minutes
Australia on Sunday added to growing pressure on China
over its handling of the novel coronavirus, questioning its transparency
and demanding an international investigation into the origins of the
virus and how it spread.
FILE
PHOTO: Australia's Foreign Minister Marise Payne speaks during a news
conference at Australian Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand, January 10, 2019.
REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha
The
coronavirus is believed to have emerged in a market selling wildlife in
the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year. It has spread around
the world infecting some 2.3 million people and killing nearly 160,000
of them, according to Reuters calculations.
Australia’s foreign minister, Marise Payne, said her concern about China’s transparency was at a “a very high point”.
“The
issues around the coronavirus are issues for independent review, and I
think that it is important that we do that,” Payne told ABC television.
“In fact, Australia will absolutely insist on that.”
Australia
has managed to get its epidemic under control before it strained its
public health system, reporting 53 new cases on Sunday. They took its
total to 6,586, according to the health ministry data.
There
have been 71 deaths in Australia. The rate of increase in new cases has
been below 1% for seven consecutive days - much lower than in many other
countries.
Payne’s call for an enquiry into the outbreak comes
at time of tense ties between her country and its most important trading
partner.
Relations have deteriorated amid Australian accusations
of Chinese meddling in domestic affairs and concern about what
Australia sees as China’s growing, and undue, influence in the Pacific
region.
“My trust in China is predicated in the long-term,” Payne
said. “My concern is around transparency and ensuring that we are able
to engage openly.”
Australia’s call for an investigation comes as U.S. President Donald Trump has been stepping up his criticism of China.
Trump
and his senior aides have also accused China of a lack of transparency
after the coronavirus broke out. On Saturday, Trump said China should
face consequences if it was “knowingly responsible” for the pandemic.
China dismisses such criticism saying it has been open about the outbreak and in warning the world about it.
‘DIDN’T HELP’
Last week, Trump suspended aid to the World Health Organization accusing it of being “China-centric”.
The
Geneva-based agency rejected that but Australian Health Minister Greg
Hunt also criticized it, saying some of its response to the coronavirus
was not helpful.
“What we saw from some officials in Geneva, we think was a response which didn’t help the world,” Hunt told a briefing.
“We have done well because we made our own decisions as a country.”
Australia
went against the advice of the WHO on Feb. 1 and banned people arriving
from China. It later closed its borders and imposed strict curbs on
public movements.
Hunt said Australia was winning in its campaign against the coronavirus but had not yet won.
“We have to focus on containment and capacity,” he said.
Neighboring
New Zealand, which adopted one the world’s harshest lockdowns even
before reporting a first death, has been even more successful in
suppressing coronavirus.
There were four new confirmed cases in
New Zealand on Sunday, bringing the total of infections to 1,098. Eleven
people have died, health ministry data showed.
“I know it hasn’t
been easy, but it has been working,” Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said
at a televised briefing. She said her government will meet on Monday to
decide whether to ease social distancing restrictions.
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