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Sunday, April 26, 2020
China Continues To Flood The World With Defective Medical Supplies
Authored by Soeren Kern via The Gatestone Institute, More than a dozen countries on four continents recently
disclosed problems with Chinese-made coronavirus tests and personal
protective equipment. The problems range from test kits tainted
with the coronavirus to medical garments contaminated with insects.
Defective Chinese face masks, purchased by Spain's Ministry of Health,
were distributed to hospitals and nursing homes across the country, and
more than 100 healthcare workers who used them tested positive for
Covid-19. A shipment from China of 8.6 million protective face masks and
150 tons of sanitary equipment arrives at Paris-Vatry Airport in France,
on April 19, 2020. (Photo by Francois Nascimbeni/AFP via Getty Images)
Gatestone Institute recently reported that
millions of pieces of medical equipment purchased from China by
European governments to combat the coronavirus pandemic are defective
and unusable. Since that report, more than a dozen countries on four continents
have disclosed problems with Chinese-made coronavirus tests and personal
protective equipment. The problems range from test kits tainted with
the coronavirus to medical garments contaminated with insects. Chinese authorities have refused to take responsibility for
the defective equipment and in many instances have cast blame on the
countries that purchased the material. They have also called on
nations of the world to stop "politicizing" the problem — at the same
time that Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Communist Party have
sought to leverage the pandemic to assert a claim to global leadership. Spain, the epicenter of the coronavirus crisis in Europe, has
experienced the greatest number of problems with medical equipment
purchased from China. After the epidemic hit Spain, the Spanish government purchased medical
supplies from China in the amount of €432 million ($470 million).
Chinese vendors demanded they be paid up front before making any
deliveries. It now appears that much of the material being supplied by
China is substandard. In late March, for instance, the Spanish Ministry of Health revealed that
more than a half million coronavirus tests it had purchased from a
Chinese vendor were defective. The tests, manufactured by Shenzhen
Bioeasy Biotechnology, a company based in China's Guangdong Province,
had an accurate detection rate of less than 30%. Bioeasy had claimed, in writing, that its tests had an accurate detection rate of 92%. After the swindle made international headlines, Bioeasy agreed to
replace the tests. On April 21, however, the Spanish newspaper El Paísreported that all 640,000 replacement tests were also useless. The Spanish government is now seeking a refund. The Chinese Embassy in Madrid blamed the
Spanish government for purchasing the tests from an unauthorized
vendor. Bioeasy, apparently, does not have a license to sell coronavirus
tests. Spain, however, has also reported problems with material
purchased from vendors that are authorized by the Chinese government. On April 15, Spain's Ministry of Health recalled 350,000
so-called FFP2 masks after laboratory tests determined that they were
substandard. The defective masks were manufactured by Garry Galaxy
Biotechnology, a company included on the Chinese government's list of
approved manufacturers of personal protective equipment. FFP2 masks are
required to filter at least 94% of aerosols, but those delivered to
Spain filtered only between 71% and 82% of aerosols. The defective masks were purchased by the Spanish Ministry of Health
and distributed to hospitals and nursing homes across the country. After
the defective masks were recalled, more than a hundred healthcare
workers who had used them tested positive for coronavirus disease (Covid-19). In the northeastern Spanish region of Catalonia, local health officials on April 18 recalled 180,000
Covid-19 antibody tests — also known as serological tests — because of
their low rate of detection. The tests, produced by the Chinese
manufacturer Guangzhou Wondfo Biotech, were purchased by the central
government in Madrid and distributed to regional health authorities to
detect Covid-19 in two priority groups: healthcare personnel and elderly
people in nursing homes. The Wondfo tests reportedly gave
negative results to people who had previously tested positive for
Covid-19, and also failed to distinguish between two types of
antibodies, including those that confer immunity. In the eastern city of Alicante, the General Hospital recalled 640 disposable medical garments after one of the boxes from China contained cockroaches. The hospital said that
it had received a total of 3,000 garments in 75 boxes and that it found
two insects inside one of the boxes. It added that given the shortage
of medical supplies, the garments would be sterilized, not destroyed. Other countries — in Europe and beyond — have also criticized the quality of Chinese medical supplies:
Australia. On April 1, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) reported that
the Australian Border Force (ABF) had seized nearly one million
Chinese-made faulty face masks and other protective clothing that was
exported to Australia to help halt the spread of coronavirus. The
material was valued at A$1.2 million (US$760,000). "We started seeing
this stuff arriving roughly three weeks ago when news of the pandemic
was really taking off," an ABF official told ABC. "The dodgy material is coming via air cargo because there is a backlog of sea freight at Australian ports."
Austria. On April 6, the Ministry of Economic Affairs confirmed that
500,000 masks ordered from China for use in South Tyrol were
"completely unusable" because they did not meet safety standards: "The
result of the quality control check showed that the masks do not meet an
FFP standard. When putting on the masks, it is impossible to obtain a
tight fit in the area of the chin and cheeks." Minister of Economics
Margarete Schramböck complained that
international providers of the urgently needed FFP2 and FFP3 masks had
not delivered the required quality in nine out of ten cases. On April 9,
Austrian media reported that
the defective mask problem was far greater than initially thought. The
Austrian Red Cross ordered 20 million masks from the same Chinese
manufacturer that made the defective masks for South Tyrol.
Belgium. On March 31, the University Hospital of Leuven rejected a shipment of 3,000 masks from China because the equipment was substandard.
Canada. On April 7, the City of Toronto recalled more
than 60,000 surgical masks made in China. The masks, valued at more
than $200,000, were provided to staff at long-term care facilities.
Toronto health authorities were investigating whether caregivers were
exposed to Covid-19 while wearing the equipment. The masks represented
around 50% of Toronto's inventory of surgical masks, according to Matthew Pegg, Toronto's fire chief and general manager of emergency management.
Czech Republic. On March 23, the Czech news site iRozhlasreported that
300,000 coronavirus test kits delivered by China had an error rate of
80%. The Czech Ministry of Interior had paid $2.1 million for the
defective kits.
Finland. On April 10, the Managing Director of Finland's National Emergency Supply Agency, Tomi Lounema, resigned after he admitted to spending €10 million ($11 million) on defective protective equipment from China.
Georgia. On March 27, Health Minister Ekaterine Tikaradze cancelled an
order for 200,000 coronavirus tests manufactured by the China-based
Shenzhen Bioeasy Biotechnology Company. The move came after Spain reported that 640,000 tests that it purchased from the company were defective. She said:
"Georgia had a contract with this company, but today it has been
canceled. The money has not been transferred. We are negotiating with
another company and at first, they will send two thousand tests. If the
reliability of those is approved by us, we will purchase an additional
quantity."
India. On April 16, the Mumbai-based Economic Timesreported that 50,000 pieces of personal protective equipment donated by China were defective and unusable.
Ireland. On April 6, the Health Service Executive (HSE) revealed that
a large portion of the €200 million delivery of personal protective
equipment supplied by China was found to be unusable for health care
workers. The HSE told the
Chinese company responsible for the delivery that unless the quality of
the equipment being sent is guaranteed, there will not be any more
deals between the two nations with regards to PPE. The government said
that it was seeking a refund.
Malaysia. On April 16, Malaysian authorities approved the use of coronavirus test kits from South Korea after similar kits from China were found to be defective. A senior official in the Ministry of Health, Noor Hisham Abdullah, said that the accuracy of the Chinese tests was "not very good." He expressed optimism
over the South Korean tests: "Now that we have a test kit that is fast,
portable and is cheap, that will make the difference."
Netherlands. On March 28, the Netherlands recalled 1.3
million face masks produced in China because they did not meet the
minimum safety standards for medical personnel. The so-called KN95 masks
are a less expensive Chinese alternative to the American-standard N95
mask, which currently is in short supply around the world. The KN95 does
not fit on the face as tightly as the N95, thus potentially exposing
medical personnel to the coronavirus.
Philippines. On March 29, the Department of Health apologized for
comments it made a day earlier that two batches of coronavirus test
kits provided by China were substandard. Undersecretary for Health Maria
Rosario Vergeire had said that
kits made by Chinese manufacturers BGI Group and Sansure Biotech were
only 40% accurate in diagnosing Covid-19 and that some of them would
have to be discarded. The Chinese Embassy in Manila rejected those
accusations and claimed that the kits complied with standards
established by the World Health Organization. "The Chinese Embassy
firmly rejects any irresponsible remarks and any attempts to undermine
our cooperation in this regard," a spokesman tweeted.
Slovakia. On April 1, Prime Minister Igor Matovič disclosed that
more than a million coronavirus tests supplied by China for a cash
payment of €15 million ($16 million) were inaccurate and unable to
detect Covid-19. "We have a ton of tests and no use for them," he said. "They should just be thrown straight into the Danube." China accused Slovakian medical personnel of using the tests incorrectly.
Turkey. On March 27, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said that
Turkey had tried Chinese-made coronavirus tests but authorities
"weren't happy about them." Professor Ateş Kara, a member of the Turkish
Health Ministry's coronavirus task force, added that
the batch of testing kits were only 30 to 35% accurate: "We have tried
them. They don't work. Spain has made a huge mistake by using them."
United Kingdom. On April 6, the London-based newspaper The Timesreported that 17.5 million coronavirus antibody tests supplied by China were defective. The Chinese manufacturers of the tests blamed British officials and politicians for misunderstanding or exaggerating the utility of the tests. The British government, which reportedly paid
at least $20 million (£16 million) for the tests, said that it was
seeking a refund. Meanwhile, other coronavirus tests destined for the UK
were found to be tainted with coronavirus.
United States. On April 17, the director of the Missouri Department of Public Safety, Sandy Karsten, revealed that 3.9 million KN95 masks manufactured in China were defective. The State of Missouri had signed a $16.5 million contract with an unidentified vendor for the masks and paid half in advance. The vendor is refusing to return the $8.25 million. Missouri Governor Mike Parson said:
"We got cheated here in this state and we are going to go out there and
try to get our money back and hold people accountable." In neighboring
Illinois, Governor J.B. Pritzker said that
the state had spent $17 million on KN95 masks that may be unusable:
"You know things come in shipments of a million — you can't go through
one mask at a time and so you try to take samples from the shipments
that come in, make sure you got what you are paying for." In Washington
State, 12,000 coronavirus testing kits produced in China were recalled after some of them were found to be contaminated with the coronavirus.
On March 30, China urged European
countries not to "politicize" concerns about the quality of medical
supplies from China. "Problems should be properly solved based on facts,
not political interpretations," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said. On April 1, the Chinese government reversed course and announced that
it was increasing its oversight of exports of coronavirus test kits
made in China. Chinese exporters of coronavirus tests must now obtain a
certificate from the National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) in
order to be cleared by China's customs agency. On April 16, the Wall Street Journalreported that
millions of pieces of medical equipment destined for the United States
were being held in warehouses in China due to the new export
restrictions imposed by the Chinese government. "We appreciate the
efforts to ensure quality control," the U.S. State Department said. "But we do not want this to serve as an obstacle for the timely export of important supplies." U.S. Senator Kelly Loeffler from Georgia accused China
of holding up shipments of test kits: "Testing is core to opening our
country back up. I'm concerned that China's holding up test kits.
They're playing games with trade policy to prevent us, the United
States, from getting the testing that we need." The coronavirus pandemic has exposed the flaws of
globalization by laying bare how the West has allowed itself to become
dangerously dependent on Communist China for the supply of essential
health care and medical products. Andrew Michta, Dean of the College of International and Security
Studies at the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies, explained:
"The Wuhan Virus and the attendant misery that the Chinese communist
state has unleashed upon the world (very much including its own people)
has laid bare a core structural flaw in the assumptions underpinning
globalization. It turns out that the radical interweaving of markets —
which was supposed to lead to the 'complex interdependence' that
international relations theorists have been predicting for the better
part of the century would lead to an increase in global stability... has
instead created an inherently fragile and teetering structure that is
exacerbating uncertainty in a time of crisis.... "If there is any good to come from the devastating impact on
our nation of this pandemic brought about by the Chinese communist
regime through its malice and incompetence, it will be the likely demise
of enthusiasm for globalization as we know it across the West. After
three decades of intellectual gymnastics aimed at convincing Americans
that the off-shoring of manufacturing and the attendant de-industrialization of the country are good for us, the time has come
for a reckoning. "Since the end of the Cold War, Western elites seem to have been in
thrall to the idea that various 'natural forces' in the economy and
politics were propelling us forward to a digitally interconnected brave
new world, one in which traditional considerations of national interest,
national economic policy, national security, and national culture would
soon be eclipsed by an emergent peaceful global reality. This virus
crisis is a wake-up call, and while some argue we are waking up too late
to effectively counter current trends, my money is on the ability of
the American people to rally in a crisis and on the resilience of
Western democratic institutions. "Today, while battling the Wuhan Virus consumes the attention
of our government agencies and health care systems, we should not lose
sight of the foundational strategic challenge confronting the West in
the emerging post-globalization era: We are in a long twilight
competition with the Chinese communist regime, a struggle we cannot
escape, whether we like it or not. Now is the time to wake up, develop a
new strategy for victory, and to move forward."