Did US-funded lab leak Ebola? Bombshell report claims virus emerged during ‘routine research activities’

Did US-funded lab leak Ebola? Bombshell report claims virus emerged during ‘routine research activities’
Red Cross workers don PPE after burying a 3-year-old boy suspected of dying from Ebola on October 13, 2022 in Mubende, Uganda (Luke Dray/Getty Images)

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.

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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.