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Saturday, 4 July 2020

The biggest revelation on the epidemic / corona will be a big tweak to China, the WHO said first we ...


    China's first WHO provided information

    Rejected Trump's allegations

At the same time, the WHO has denied the allegations made by US President Donald Trump. Notably, Trump has failed to provide the WHO with the information it needs to stop the epidemic and is taking a softer stance towards China.

China had already been warned

    TikTok is being hit hard by this Indian app, downloaded by millions of people in a single day
    4.58 crore girls missing in India in 50 years, 9 states including Gujarat are in dire straits
    Narendra Modi said that if the vaccine is ready, it will be given to the Corona Warriors first. The government's plan is to take the vaccine.

The initial deadline was set on April 9 after the World Health Organization criticized the epidemic's initial response to the epidemic. In this chronology, the WHO said only that cases of pneumonia were reported on December 31 at the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission in Hubei Province. However, it was not immediately clear if the information was provided by Chinese authorities or if it was obtained from another source.

WHO disclosure in new chronology

However, in a new chronology released this week by the World Health Organization, more information about the events is given. This indicates that it was the WHO office in China that notified the case of 'viral pneumonia' on December 31. This was done after the issue of pneumonia was announced to the media on the Wuhan Health Commission website.

On the same day, the WHO's Epidemiological Information Service reported that U.S. The report, released by the International Epidemic Surveillance Network Promedad, noted cases of pneumonia in Wuhan for unknown reasons.

Information given to China on 3 January

Subsequently, the WHO sought information from Chinese officials on the situation on 1 January and 2 January, which was given to them on 3 January.

Michelle Rhea, director of the WHO's health emergency program, told a news conference on Friday that any country has 24-48 hours to officially confirm a case and provide the agency with additional information about its nature and causes.

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