China can be held legally accountable for Corona ‘cover-ups’

March 21, 2020
Washington: After US President Donald Trump calling COVID-19 a “Chinese virus” and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blaming China, Russia and Iran for spreading disinformation about new coronavirus, questions are now being raised over whether Beijing can be held legally accountable for covering up initial outbreak and clamping down on real information from being shared.

During a White House briefing on Friday Pompeo said the false information is coming from “places like China and Russia and Iran, where there are coordinated efforts to disparage what America is doing and our activity to do all the things President Trump has set in motion here”.

Trump earlier said that it’s unfortunate that the new coronavirus got out of control.

“It came from China, it got out of control. Some people are upset. I know President Xi. He loves China. He respects the United States and I have to say I respect China greatly and I respect President XI,” he said.

According to a report in Fox News, the communist superpower can be held legally accountable.

“An argument could be made that just like support for terrorism, which is legally actionable, a government that engages in such reckless disregard and negligence and covers up an epidemic which has the potential to spread worldwide could be held legally liable,” Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, an Israel-based attorney with an specialization in suing terrorist regimes and state sponsors who orchestrate human rights abuses on behalf of victims was quoted as saying in the report.

“Cover-ups and deliberate acts to conceal a deadly medical crisis are not [among] the protected acts of a sovereign state or of responsible leaders,” the expert added.

“China is not to blame for creating the virus but for not sounding the international alarm and trying to conceal it from the world,” she said.

A latest study by the University of South Hampton in the UK said China could have prevented 95 per cent of coronavirus infections if its measures to contain the outbreak had begun three weeks earlier.

“Coronavirus cases could have been reduced by 66 per cent if the measures were taken a week earlier, or by 86 per cent if action began two weeks earlier. If action was taken three weeks later, then the situation could have worsened 18-fold,” said the study.

According to a timeline by Axios, it was December 10 when China reported first patient that started showing COVID-19 like symptoms.

The governments can sue China before international tribunals for violating its obligation to report the coronavirus outbreak early.

China has hit out at Trump, who had called coronavirus a “Chinese” disease.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang urged “the US to correct its mistake and stop its groundless accusations against China”. State new agency Xinhua termed Trump’s language was “racist and xenophobic”.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has announced the expulsion of American journalists working for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post as a measure taken by Beijing “in the spirit of reciprocity.”

On March 2, Washington announced that state-controlled Chinese media outlets such as Xinhua, CGTN, China Daily and China Radio International could only employ a restricted number of Chinese nationals for these organisations on US territory.

Trump has also accused China of spreading false information about the US.

“I didn’t appreciate the fact that China was saying that our military gave it to them. Our military did not give it to anybody.”

“China was putting out information, which was false,” he said.

The number of infections worldwide climbed to over 275,000 on Saturday, including over 11,000 deaths, according to John Hopkins Univeristy’s coronavirus resource centre.
IANS

Three Bengaluru medical students drown in rough seas off Kerala’s Payyambalam beach

Thiruvananthapuram: In a tragic incident, three medical students from Bengaluru lost their lives after being swept away by strong waves at the Payyambalam beach in Kerala's Kannur on Sunday, police...

Lakshadweep woman diagnosed with amoebic meningoencephalitis in Kerala’s Kochi

Thiruvananthapuram: Kerala's Kochi has reported its first case of amoebic meningoencephalitis, a rare but potentially fatal brain infection, after a 25-year-old woman from Lakshadweep tested positive for the disease. The...

Pharma agency sealed in Raebareli over purchase of 1.4 lakh bottles of codeine syrup

Raebareli: Authorities on Tuesday sealed a pharmaceutical agency in Uttar Pradesh's Raebareli after discovering that it had purchased 1.40 lakh bottles of codeine-based cough syrup, a controlled substance known for...

WHO flags three contaminated cough syrups in India, including Coldrif

New Delhi: The World Health Organisation (WHO) has identified three adulterated syrups manufactured in India, including the infamous Coldrif cough syrup, and has urged authorities worldwide to report to the...

Toxic cough syrup claims another life in Nagpur hospital, toll rises to 22

Bhopal/Chhindwara: The death toll from the toxic Coldrif cough syrup tragedy in Madhya Pradesh’s Chhindwara district has risen to 22, following the death of five-year-old Mayank Suryavanshi. Mayank, a resident...

Telangana issues public alert for two more cough syrups

Hyderabad: Telangana Drugs Control Administration on Wednesday issued 'stop use' (public alert) notice regarding two more cough syrups found adulterated with Diethylene Glycol (DEG), a toxic substance.   It has...

MP cough syrup horror: Death toll rises to 13 in Chhindwara as another toddler succumbs in Nagpur

Chhindwara/Nagpur: In a heart-wrenching escalation of Madhya Pradesh's ongoing public health crisis, one-and-a-half-year-old Dhani Dehariya from Junapani village in Tamia tehsil breathed her last at Nagpur's Government Medical College and...

NHRC seeks answers from MP govt in incidents of child branding, electrocution deaths

Bhopal: The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has taken suo motu cognisance of two separate incidents in Madhya Pradesh that raise grave concerns over the safety and dignity of children....

Centre directs states to ensure rational use of cough syrups

New Delhi: In view of concerns relating to the quality and administration of cough syrups, the government on Sunday directed states to ensure rational use of cough syrups, particularly among...

Cough syrup tragedy deepens with two deaths in MP’s Betul, probe initiated

Betul: The Coldrif cough syrup crisis in Madhya Pradesh has taken a disturbing turn with the deaths of two young children in Betul district, allegedly after consuming the same medicine...

Andhra CM orders probe into infant’s death at childcare centre

Amaravati: Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu on Sunday ordered an inquiry into the death of a one-and-a-half-year-old boy at a government-run childcare centre in Anantapur and 85 girl...

Rajasthan cough syrup deaths: All 19 medicines of pharma firm suspended, 3 officials removed

Jaipur: Rajasthan Health Minister Gajendra Singh Khinvsar on Saturday confirmed that all 19 medicines supplied by Kaysan Pharma, Jaipur, have been suspended following reports of adverse effects linked to Dextromethorphan...

Read Previous

Salem students create 2 apps to help tackle COVID-19 crisis

Read Next

Around 300 Indians stranded in Malaysia, seek help

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com