Timeline of Chinese Regime’s Coverup of COVID-19 Outbreak

Despite the evidence, Chinese authorities played down the severity of the outbreak for weeks, while suppressing vital information about COVID-19.
Timeline of Chinese Regime’s Coverup of COVID-19 Outbreak
Eva Fu
Updated:
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This timeline chronicles the early stages of the viral outbreak in China and the Chinese regime’s coverup. Despite the evidence, Chinese authorities played down the severity of the outbreak for weeks, while suppressing vital information about COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

By the time authorities implemented the first containment measures on Jan. 23, it was too late. The disease had already spread around the country and overseas.

Less than two months later, the outbreak was declared a global pandemic. It has now spread to more than 200 countries and territories.

Security guards stand in front of the closed Huanan wholesale seafood market in the city of Wuhan, Hubei province, on Jan. 12, 2020. (Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images)
Security guards stand in front of the closed Huanan wholesale seafood market in the city of Wuhan, Hubei province, on Jan. 12, 2020. Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images

2020

Jan. 1:
  • Officials close Huanan Seafood Market, which they believe may be a source of the outbreak.
  • A Hubei Provincial Health Commission official tells a genomics company to stop testing virus samples and to destroy all existing samples.
  • Local police summon eight Wuhan medical workers who had shared information about the virus online, and reprimand them for “rumor-mongering.”
Jan. 2:
  • Government-run Wuhan virology lab obtains the full virus genome. This information is not made public until seven days later.
  • The PLA Naval University of Engineering in Wuhan, a military university, bans entry to visitors whose body temperature is over 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit, according to a leaked internal notice.
Jan 3:
  • Local police call in Li and reprimand him for “rumor-mongering.”
  • The National Health Commission issues a notice to researchers to hand over virus samples to designated pathogen detection agencies or destroy them.
Jan. 4:
  • Hong Kong activates “serious response” level to the outbreak.
  • Beijing sends a team of medical experts to Wuhan.
Jan. 7:
  • Li contracts the virus while treating an infected patient. He later dies of the virus on Feb. 7.
  • Chinese leader Xi Jinping gets involved in response by issuing the first containment order. This isn’t made public until February.
Jan. 9:
  • Xu Jianguo, a lead expert in the response team, tells Chinese state media that researchers mapped the full virus sequence two days earlier, and believe it’s a new coronavirus.
Jan. 12:
  • Chinese health authorities share the genome sequence with the WHO.
Jan. 11–Jan. 16:
  • Two important CCP conferences are held in Wuhan. On Jan. 11, Wuhan health officials report a drop in the number of infections. For the remainder of this period, they report no new cases.
Jan. 13:
  • Thailand confirms its first infection—a Chinese tourist who traveled from Wuhan—in the first known case outside China.
Jan. 14:
  • The WHO says that Chinese authorities had found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission. It also notes “limited human-to-human transmission, potentially among families” is possible.
Jan. 15:Jan. 16:
  • Japan reports its first case—a Chinese national from Wuhan—becoming the second country outside China to confirm an infection from the virus. The man tested positive between Jan. 10 and Jan. 15.
Jan. 18:
  • Local officials hold a large annual potluck banquet in Wuhan’s Baibuting community for 40,000 families, despite a request by committee staff to cancel it.
  • Beijing dispatches a second panel of health experts to Wuhan.
Jan. 20:
  • Famed Chinese doctor Zhong Nanshan, who is part of China’s response team, confirms that the disease can be spread from human to human. He notes that one patient had infected 14 health workers.
  • By the end of the month, more than 3,000 health workers will be infected in Hubei Province, as revealed by a Chinese official on March 6.
  • South Korea reports its first case, a 35-year-old Chinese woman who traveled from Wuhan.
  • Chinese leader Xi Jinping makes his first public remarks about the disease, calling on authorities to take swift action to combat the outbreak, in a speech reported by Chinese state media.
Jan. 21:
  • The United States, the first country outside of Asia, confirms its first case. The Seattle man tested positive on Jan. 20.
Jan. 23:
  • Wuhan imposes a lockdown. By then, around 5 million people had left the city without being screened for the virus. A March study estimates 86 percent of all infections were undocumented prior to the Jan. 23 travel restrictions.
A resident peers over a barrier set up to prevent people from entering in Wuhan, in China's central Hubei province, on Feb. 29, 2020. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)
A resident peers over a barrier set up to prevent people from entering in Wuhan, in China's central Hubei province, on Feb. 29, 2020. STR/AFP via Getty Images
Jan. 24:
  • Thirteen other cities in Hubei Province (whose capital is Wuhan) are placed under lockdown.
  • Hubei authorities announce a bid to build a temporary hospital in days.
  • Chinese Lunar New Year festivities begin. Prior to that, hundreds of millions of Chinese travel around the country to celebrate the occasion with family.
Jan. 27:
  • Authorities in Hubei Province say they will free up 100,000 hospital beds for patients.
  • Wuhan Mayor Zhou Xianwang concedes that disclosures of the outbreak were not timely, but attempts to shift blame to the central government, saying he needed permission from higher-ups before releasing information.
  • Beijing extends the New Year holiday to Feb. 2 and closes schools indefinitely.
Jan. 28:
  • U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar says Beijing declined an offer to send a team of health experts to China. On Feb. 7, he says the United States had been offering for more than a month.
Jan. 30:Jan. 30 Onwards:
  • Countries around the world start imposing border closures and travel restrictions.
Cathy He contributed to this report. 
This article was published in The Epoch Times’ CCP Virus special edition magazine.
A previous version of this article incorrectly stated the date when China shared the genome sequence with the WHO. It was Jan. 12. The Epoch Times regrets the error.
Eva Fu
Eva Fu
Reporter
Eva Fu is a New York-based writer for The Epoch Times focusing on U.S. politics, U.S.-China relations, religious freedom, and human rights. Contact Eva at [email protected]
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