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We are working on the English version of PALA throughout 2025
This Q & A reveals how European experts responded and advised very differently from their peers in many West Pacific countries. Europeans – and the whole world – are paying the highest price for what may be the biggest blunder of the 21st century.
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Health experts throughout the world got information about the coronavirus at the end of 2019.
Thailand started health checks of China travellers on January 3, 2020. Taiwan even started health checks on flights from Wuhan on December 31, 2019. So their health experts understood the danger immediately or very quickly, as did their colleagues in Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam and other West Pacific countries…
Not at all, for a very clear reason. The scientific community is since long globalised and has all means of communication. No expert can argue not to know about how colleagues in East and South East Asia reacted.
No, they haven’t any excuse. Because competent scientists and experts are perfectly capable to learn about and understand dangers, risks or good practices that are reported, described or experimented by others.
Qualified experts are used – or should be used - to share scientific knowledge through publications, congresses, forums etc. Society and politics must be able to rely on their competence.
That’s certainly not a valid argument. If these experts do feel insecure about their knowledge because of not having the same experience, they should never act as an expert and advisor. They should refrain from giving whatever advice themselves but instead refer to the real experts in this domain, in this case to be found mainly in East Asia.
That was a severe mistake. Even worse, many scientific experts have made a clear error. If there is any uncertainty, they should report all possibilities.
They had to know perfectly well that countries in the Western Pacific had stopped all flights with China, closed their borders, persistently traced all infections and required quarantine. Not only did they fail to advise this, they didn't even mention this possibility.
The result of so much failure is that they actually welcomed the virus to Europe, and through Europe to the world.
It’s true that Taiwan or New Zealand are islands but Thailand, Vietnam, South Korea or China are certainly not islands. These countries have a lot more inhabitants. Australia could be seen as an island but is also a continent in itself.
New Zealand, Taiwan, Australia, South Korea or Japan are full democracies. Belgium, Italy, Greece, Poland and many more European countries don’t meet their standards.
What's more, welcoming the virus on board of planes meant freedom for some, but only for a few weeks. Soon, this lack of policy dramatically resulted in lockdowns that ended freedom for all and became a nightmare for billions of people. The corona crisis is by far the worst man-made disaster since World War II.
New Zealand, Thailand, Australia, Vietnam, Taiwan - and even China where this pandemic started and the initial response was denial - were able to contain virus outbreaks. Some were very successful in (almost) achieving the goal of zero-contamination.
Experts in Europe did not even recommend a zero-contamination policy when, in June 2020, contamination rates in many countries were very low, and the dangers of the virus were extremely clear.
As of March 22, 2021, COVID-19 caused more than 800,000 deaths in Europe.
If Europe did as well as South Korea or Australia, it would have less than 25,000 COVID-19 deaths.
If Europe did as well as New Zealand, it would have 3,540 COVID-19 deaths.
If Europe did as well as Thailand, fewer than a thousand people would have died.
If Europe did as well as Taiwan, only 285 people would have died from COVID-19 and not 800,000… so far.
Although hypothetical, it is useful and even necessary to do this exercise in order to be better prepared for future crises.
Realistically, governments would have looked atTaiwan, Thailand or South Korea - as, say, New Zealand did. So it was quite possible that they were warned much sooner and would understand the need for policies to keep the virus out of their country; and to resolutely opt for zero-contamination as a clear health goal should the virus enter their country.
A European policy that would not have welcomed the virus but, on the contrary, would fight it fiercely, would not have spread the virus around the world.
Governments always bear ultimate responsibility because their experts are only advisers.
During all this time, European governments have neglected to look at countries in the West Pacific with a successful approach, confront their own experts with it, learn from it and adjust their policies.
They should have dismissed their own experts for not once, not twice, but at least three times proving their inability to protect people, societies and the economy.
At first they saw no danger and for a long time continued to consider COVID-19 as a severe flu, secondly they could not imagine that societies should shield themselves from the coronavirus by stopping flights and closing borders and thirdly, they never proposed to eradicate the virus, even when infections had fallen sharply.
In fact, these failing experts were the world's greatest super-spreaders of the virus.
Governments could and should instead have consulted experts from Taiwan, Thailand or New Zealand. More than ever, it is important to know the insights from countries that have hardly any infections or have even (almost) extinguished the virus.
Let's ask their experts these vital questions. Now that there are vaccines, do they continue to aim for zero contamination and thus a virus-free society without the risk of dangerous variants? Is it still feasible to eradicate the virus in European and other countries? Can the world still get rid of it completely? How should that be handled?
The answer is yes, and billions of people have the right to know why things turned out differently and why most of them have to endure the worst but avoidable crisis of their lives.
Dirk Barrez
The author of this article is editor-in-chief of PALA.be and a former VRT journalist (VRT is the Flemish public radio and television)
This article is based on the original Dutch article: Barrez Dirk, "Frappante coronaverschillen. Een kleine tijdslijn, Pala.be, February 1, 2021”.
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