Did US-funded lab leak Ebola? Bombshell report claims virus emerged during ‘routine research activities’
NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK: A bombshell analysis suggests that the 2014 Ebola outbreak may have resulted from an unintentional lab leak at a laboratory financed by the US government. Journalist Sam Husseini and virologist Dr Jonathan Latham -- a former researcher at the University of Wisconsin, claim the virus likely emerged during ‘routine research activities’ from a laboratory in Sierra Leone, which at the time was receiving funding from the US government for its work on Lassa fever.
The lab in Kenema specialized in hemorrhagic viruses similar to Ebola, but it's unclear if it handled the epidemic-causing pathogen. According to most experts, Ebola emerged naturally during a spillover event from animals in Guinea, around 175 miles from the lab. Bats known to harbor Ebola were identified in a village where the first official patient was diagnosed but researchers never found the original animal host. This has given credence to many theories that the virus may have originated from a lab.