The new theory about the origin of the coronavirus: Developed in the body of a Chinese 9 years ago

The origin of the Covid-19 pandemic remains a mystery, despite research by the World Health Organization, with the theory that it was “created” or to escape the virus from a laboratory in the Chinese city of Wuhan to be discussed openly now.

But a new theory supports something else. Dr Jonathan Latham, executive director of the American Bioscience Resource Project, believes that Covid-19 may have developed in the body of an infected Chinese miner almost a decade before the pandemic took place and terribly changed our lives on the planet.

Samples of the enigmatic miner’s disease were sent to scientists studying the viruses in Uhan and from there the virus may have escaped the general population, the Telegraph notes.

Dr Latham says the appearance of the Alpha mutant in Kent, UK, last fall proves that the virus “can make strange evolutionary leaps” and quickly develop large numbers of mutations when it stays in a human for a long time.

Earlier this year, the University of Cambridge concluded that the highly contagious Alpha mutation may have evolved into an immunocompromised patient who carried the disease for many months.

Hundreds of mutations

Speaking at a webinar on the origin of the pandemic, the scientist noted: “The theory requires many hundreds mutations to a miner to be converted to Sars-Cov-2. Decades were compressed in about six months.

But we have heard of the astonishing phenomenon of isolated cases of very rapidly evolving viruses in Britain. In this one person in England there was as much evolution as there had been in millions of other infections.

“Our theory suggests that a similar development occurred inside the miners’ lungs after the mysterious illness in 2012, and suggests that the virus leaked from a medical sample taken from the miners who were infected by the outbreak.”

Back in 2012, according to the report, six miners who were cleaning guano bats at the Tongguan mine became seriously ill with a pneumonia-like illness, which was very similar to Covid-19. Three of them died and the rest remained in hospital for up to six months.

A Chinese researcher who researched deaths for his master’s thesis has concluded that workers may have been infected from a species of coronavirus that resembles Sars and comes from bats.

The virus inside the caves

Miner in a mine

A year after the deaths, Uhan scientists found a virus called RaTG13 in these caves. It was later found to be 96% identical to Covid-19, but must have deviated 40 years earlier.

New theory suggests that evolution from a virus such as RaTG13 may have occurred much faster in a miner’s body.

“We know that coronaviruses “They were plentiful near the mine, and we know that some of the miners have been hospitalized for a long time,” Dr Latham added.

“Their treatment lasted six months and allowed the development of new adapted human coronaviruses.

“We know that a lot of medical samples were sent to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, so the question is, what was in the samples and what happened to the viruses that were found?”

Scientists investigating the origin of the pandemic have repeatedly asked for details about the sequences of viruses housed and studied at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. But a database containing details of the samples is no longer available and went offline shortly before the pandemic began.

Alison Young, director of the Missouri School of Journalism, also told the same webinar that laboratory accidents are common. “One of the arguments is that laboratory experiments are extremely rare. Laboratory accidents are not uncommon. In the US in 2020, 134 cases of exposure to viruses, bacteria and toxins in laboratories, regulated by the US government, were reported. “Laboratory accidents and reports happen often.”

The Telegraph article on the new theory about the origin of the coronavirus

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