International scientists will travel to Wuhan's Chinese city next month to study the origins of the COVID-19 (novel coronavirus), stated the World Health Organization (WHO).

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The coronavirus first emerged in Wuhan's central Chinese city in December 2019, before spreading across China and triggering a global pandemic.
A biologist of the WHO team told a leading media outlet that the WHO was not seeking to apportion blame, but rather to prevent future outbreaks, the BBC reported on Wednesday.
"It's really not about finding a guilty country," Fabian Leendertz of Germany's Robert Koch Institute said.
"It's about trying to understand what happened and then see if, based on those data, we can try to reduce the risk in the future."
Beijing has been reluctant to agree to an independent inquiry, and it has taken many months of negotiations for the WHO to be allowed access to the city.
President Donald Trump's administration has accused China of trying to conceal the initial outbreak.
The mission was expected to last four or five weeks, he added.
Research suggests that coronaviruses capable of infecting humans may have been circulating undetected in bats for decades.
Last December, a Chinese doctor at Wuhan Central Hospital - Li Wenliang - tried to warn fellow medics about a possible outbreak of a new disease but was told by police to "stop making false comments" and was investigated for "spreading rumors."
Li died in February after contracting the virus while treating patients in the city.
Source-IANS
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