Bats "very likely" to have passed on COVID-19 to humans through unknown animal: WHO

Bats "very likely" to have passed on COVID-19 to humans through unknown animal: WHO

COVID-19 is “very likely” to have first been passed from bats to humans via another animal, according to the World Health Organisation. 

Studies suggest role of bats, snakes in outbreak of China virus
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In 2019, the deadly COVID-19 virus broke out in the Chinese city of Wuhan - and humans tried to figure of how the virus originated.

Many suggested that the virus was "developed" in a laboratory. 

On Monday, the World Health Organisation (WHO) reported that COVID-19 was very likely passed on to humans by an unknown animal through bats. 

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Evidence suggested that Sars-CoV-2 (COVID-19) emerged naturally in bats before passing to humans via an unknown animal host.

According to the report, it is “extremely unlikely” that the virus was leaked from a laboratory in the Chinese city of Wuhan, where COVID-19 first emerged in late 2019.

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