Coronavirus Compensation PDF
Coronavirus Compensation PDF
Coronavirus Compensation PDF
COMPENSATION?
ASSESSING CHINA’S
POTENTIAL CULPABILITY
AND AVENUES OF LEGAL
RESPONSE
BY MATTHEW HENDERSON, DR ALAN MENDOZA,
DR ANDREW FOXALL, JAMES ROGERS, AND SAM ARMSTRONG
April 2020
Published in 2020 by The Henry Jackson Society
www.henryjacksonsociety.org
Cover Photo:
People in protective medical masks on background of the Chinese flag – stock
illustration. https://depositphotos.com/337924180/stock-illustration-people-
protective-medical-masks-background.html
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors would like to thank all those who have offered guidance and counsel in the
drafting of this paper, many of whom have asked to remain anonymous. In particular,
thanks are due to the public international lawyers who provided insight into the realities
of international law. Thanks are also due to scholars who agreed to peer review this
work at short notice. Finally, thanks are owed to Daniel MacIntyre and George Cook,
research assistants at the Henry Jackson Society, for their work in sourcing background
information.
ABOUT US
The Henry Jackson Society is a think tank and policy-shaping force that fights for the
principles and alliances which keep societies free – working across borders and party
lines to combat extremism, advance democracy and real human rights, and make a
stand in an increasingly uncertain world.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
• The COVID-19 outbreak is a global catastrophe of a historic scale. The novel SARS-
type virus that emerged in Wuhan, China in November or December 2019 has spread
rapidly, due to its very high rate of human-to-human transmission, causing tens of
thousands of deaths and significant disruption to the global economy.
• The People’s Republic of China (PRC) was bound by international law, in the form of
the International Health Regulations (2005), to report timely, accurate and detailed
public health information. However, throughout December 2019 and January 2020,
the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) – the government of the PRC – failed in its
obligations to do this. In fact, it appears at least possible that this was a deliberate act
of mendacity.
• As a direct consequence of the CCP’s decision to not share information about the
initial stages of the outbreak of COVID-19, the disease spread far faster than it would
otherwise have done and reactions by countries globally were hampered. It is possible
that – had accurate information have been provided at an early juncture – the infection
would not have left China.
• Beyond the human cost of this pandemic, governments globally have responded to
the virus by taking robust economic measures, with entire nations going into various
forms of lockdown. The measures taken by the G7 – the group of the world’s major
advanced economies – amount to £3.2 trillion (US$4 trillion).
• In order to preserve the rules-based international system and to protect taxpayers
from punitive liabilities, the world should seek to take legal action against the PRC for
the breaches of international law and their consequences.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
4
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION 7
4. CONCLUSION 37
5
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
INTRODUCTION
The world is in crisis. COVID-19, the Coronavirus that began in Wuhan in the People’s Republic
of China (PRC) in late 2019, had — by 1 April 2020 — claimed more than 43,000 lives.1
More than 870,000 people have tested positive for the virus, with potentially many times
more having gone undiagnosed.2 Every continent, except Antarctica, has been affected.
COVID-19 is not the first pandemic of the twenty-first century, but it is the deadliest.
The COVID-19 outbreak is first and foremost a human tragedy, but it is also having a
significant and growing impact on the global economy. Large-scale quarantines, travel
restrictions and social-distancing measures have been introduced in many countries,
leading to a fall in consumer and business spending. Speaking on 23 March 2020, Kristalina
Georgieva, head of the International Monetary Fund, said that this year the world will face
“a recession at least as bad as during the [2008] global financial crisis or worse”.3
This is not China’s first experience of a lethal influenza epidemic. COVID-19 is related to
the SARS virus which caused an epidemic in China and overseas in 2002-3. The Chinese
Communist Party (CCP) attempted to cover up evidence of this for months, resulting in
avoidable deaths and disruption at home and abroad. In the aftermath, the World Health
Organisation (WHO) strengthened its International Health Regulations (IHR) precisely in
order to prevent future cover-ups.
If – during this outbreak – the CCP had fulfilled its obligations under the IHR, much of
the current disaster could have been avoided. But it seems that the CCP has not learned
the lessons of SARS. Time and again throughout the early stages of the initial outbreak,
Chinese authorities lied about the situation. They cracked down on doctors discussing the
virus, and some were detained by the police. Even when the Chinese authorities declared
the outbreak to the WHO on 31 December 2019, they gave no detail of the evidence they
held on human-to-human transmission, and continued to suppress explicit data on this
point until they quarantined Wuhan on 23 January 2020, by which time five million locals
had been allowed to travel out of the city.
The first case of COVID-19 to appear overseas was registered on 13 January in Thailand; this
was a traveller who had just returned from Wuhan. Two Chinese tourists who had arrived
in Milan on 23 January were registered as Italy’s first cases of COVID-19 on 30 January.4
The Chinese authorities falsely stated that there was no human-to-human transmission of
the disease. China failed to expeditiously share crucial information about virus transmission
with the WHO, the world’s global police officer for health, resulting in protracted delay in
WHO’s decision-making on declaring the risk of a pandemic. One recent study, from the
University of Southampton, found that if interventions had “been conducted one week, two
weeks or three weeks earlier, cases could have been reduced by 66 percent, 86 percent
and 95 percent respectively”.5
1
‘Globally, authorities have confirmed more than 870,000 cases of the coronavirus and 43,000 deaths’, BBC News, 1
April 2020, available at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51768274, last visited: 2 April 2020.
2
ibid.
3
‘IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva’s Statement Following a G20 Ministerial Call on the Coronavirus Emergency’,
International Monetary Fund, 23 March 2020, available at: https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2020/03/23/
pr2098-imf-managing-director-statement-following-a-g20-ministerial-call-on-the-Coronavirus-emergency, last
visited: 28 March 2020.
4
‘Coronavirus, primi due casi in Italia «Sono due cinesi in vacanza a Roma» Sono arrivati a Milano il 23 gennaio’, Corriere,
30 January 2020, available at: https://www.corriere.it/cronache/20_gennaio_30/coronavirus-italia-corona-9d6dc436-
4343-11ea-bdc8-faf1f56f19b7.shtml, last visited: 30 March 2020.
5
‘Globally, authorities have confirmed more than 870,000 cases of the coronavirus and 43,000 deaths’, BBC News,
1 April 2020, available at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51768274, last visited: 2 April 2020.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
This paucity of information from China in the initial stages of the outbreak has been lamented
around the world. Speaking on BBC’s The Andrew Marr Show on 29 March 2020, Michael
Gove, Minister for the Cabinet Office, said:
It was the case… that the first case of Coronavirus in China was established in
December of last year. But, it was also the case that some of the reporting from
China was not clear about the scale, the nature, the infectiousness of this.6
Contemporary sources reveal just how significant an effect this lack of information had on
the United Kingdom (UK). Box 2, a case study within this report, charts the discussions of
the UK’s New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group through January
as the disease spread and the difficulties faced by the committee in establishing the real
picture of the disease.
China’s behaviour is taken from the authoritarian playbook. The CCP sought to conceal bad
news at the top, and to conceal bad news from the outside world. In doing so, Beijing has
repeated many of the mistakes it made in 2003, when it obstructed the flow of information
around the SARS crisis, and in doing so made the crisis worse. Now, unlike then, China
has responded by deploying an advanced and sophisticated disinformation campaign to
convince the world that it is not to blame for the crisis, and that instead the world should
be grateful for all that China is doing, including a massive campaign on Twitter, where it has
tens of thousands of bot accounts at its service.7 China has also pulled the wool over the
eyes of the WHO. A strong rules-based international system requires robust international
institutions.
The truth is that China is responsible for COVID-19 – and if legal claims were brought against
Beijing they could amount to trillions of pounds.
This report documents the CCP’s negligence in the early stages of the outbreak and analyses
how this contributed to the spread of the virus. It then outlines a number of potential legal
avenues that states, corporations and individuals could pursue to hold the CCP to account
for its actions – including the 2005 International Health Regulations (IHR). Next, the report
offers an overview of the cost of the virus to the members of the G7, which represents the
world’s largest advanced economies. Finally, by way of a conclusion, the report argues
that it is vital for the future of the rules-based international system that China is not able to
escape the consequences of its actions in response to this pandemic.
6
ibid.
7
‘IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva’s Statement Following a G20 Ministerial Call on the Coronavirus Emergency’,
International Monetary Fund, 23 March 2020, available at: https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2020/03/23/
pr2098-imf-managing-director-statement-following-a-g20-ministerial-call-on-the-Coronavirus-emergency,
last visited: 28 March 2020.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
Date Event
17 November First record – in unpublished, unconfirmed Chinese government
2019 documents seen by the South China Morning Post (SCMP) – of a virus
infection matching what is later identified as COVID-19 in a 55-year-
old male from Hubei Province. Eight comparable cases are recorded in
November, according to SCMP.
1 December A later report in The Lancet, published by Chinese scientists, states that
the first known COVID-19 case is recorded on this date.
8 December A further patient is recorded with what have become recognisable
symptoms. A later World Health Organisation (WHO) document reports
that the first case of COVID-19 was recorded on this date.
Mid Between 1 and 5 new cases are now being recorded each day, according
December to unpublished, unconfirmed Chinese government documents seen by
the SCMP.
20 December 60 confirmed cases have been reported by this date, according to
unpublished, unconfirmed Chinese government documents seen by the
SCMP.
27 December A friend of the now famous deceased COVID-19 ‘whistle-blower’ Dr
Li Wenliang later writes that on this date the friend’s own medical
department was the first to report the new outbreak to the Wuhan
Centre for Disease Control. Another doctor involved in diagnosing
cases of the virus on this date later said he had been sure then that the
disease would spread from human to human.
Unpublished, unconfirmed Chinese government documents seen by the
SCMP report that 181 cases of infection have now been recorded.
30 December Dr Li sends a message to his friends about a SARS-like outbreak. He and
these friends were later investigated by police, and Li was obliged to
sign a pledge not to spread any more “disruptive rumours”.
Medical authorities ban staff from publicising the outbreak, and impede
efforts to bring existing research into the virus to completion by
delaying approval to circulate necessary data.
Unpublished, unconfirmed Chinese government documents seen by the
SCMP report that the total numbers of cases stands at 266.
31 December China reports the outbreak to the WHO.
A low-key public notice by Wuhan health authorities describes a new
flu outbreak with 27 cases, 7 of them serious, linked to the Huanan
Seafood Wholesale Market, as yet no clear evidence of human to human
transmission, and advises people with persistent fever to seek medical
help.
The New Year speech of Xi Jinping, General Secretary of the Chinese
Communist Party, makes no reference to the outbreak.
Xinhua, China’s official state-run news agency, reports that all cases are
linked to the Huanan Market in Wuhan and that there is no evidence of
human-to-human (HTH) transmission.
9
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
Date Event
1 January Huanan Market is closed. 31 biological samples collected that day at the
2020 market from the animal sales area are later claimed in state media to
contain virus DNA akin to COVID-19.
Unpublished, unconfirmed Chinese government documents seen by the
SCMP report a total of 381 cases.
2 January 41 new cases confirmed on this date at one Wuhan hospital were
reported to include 27 patients who had been to the Huanan Market,
while the rest had not.
2-16 January Wuhan authorities maintain that new case numbers have fallen
significantly.
Around this time, the surge begins of visitors to and from Wuhan for
New Year celebrations.
6-11 January Hubei Province CCP holds annual meeting of the Provincial Peoples’
Congress.
7 January State news agency Xinhua reports a meeting of Politburo Standing
Committee (PSC) which would have been led by Xi Jinping. Later, in the
text of a 3 February speech published on 15 February, Xi states that at
this meeting he issued ‘requirements’ for the control of the outbreak.
9 January Record of death of a patient from COVID-19 who had earlier infected his
wife, demonstrating HTH.
10 January A Shanghai laboratory completes genome sequencing of the COVID-19
virus; a report of this is passed to WHO.
Dr Li Wenliang falls ill with COVID-19, caught from one of his patients.
11 January A Western medical journal later reports 7 other healthcare workers have
been infected with virus by this date. Chinese official media refer to one
other case of a doctor with the virus.
14 January WHO epidemiologist says that COVID-19 shows ‘limited’ HTH.
WHO then says this is a ‘misunderstanding’ and issues a tweet saying
that there is no evidence of HTH, citing Chinese health officials.
15 January Caixin (a major media group funded by state-backed and private
entities, and one of the PRC’s apparently least subservient media voices)
reports that one radiologist had himself detected 50 new cases in one
Wuhan hospital on this date.
16 January Wuhan Municipal Health Commission states that the virus may have
been spread by HTH.
18 January Public banquet based on home-made food shared by 40,000 guests in
one Wuhan District, soon followed by numerous viral infections.
20 January Xi Jinping’s first public statement on the outbreak, referring to “the
need for timely release of information”.
22-23 January Wuhan put under lockdown. The Mayor of Wuhan later says in a public
statement (on 26 January) that five million travellers had already left the
city by this time.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
Date Event
23 January The WHO’s International Health Regulations (IHR) Emergency
Committee meets in Geneva. It notes that HTH has been observed, but
defers decision to declare a Public Health Emergency of International
Concern (PHEIC). China is asked to collaborate further with WHO on the
understanding of the COVID-19 virus’s full potential for HTH.
25 January Beginning of Lunar New Year. The text of speech given by Xi Jinping on
3 February, published on 15 February, indicates that he chaired another
PSC on COVID-19 on 25 January, at which he took pains to demonstrate
his ongoing concern with the issue. 56 million Hubei residents are now
under lockdown.
27 January Xi Jinping appoints Premier Li Keqiang as head of the COVID-19 task
force.
28 January Xi Jinping meets Tedros Adhanom, Director-General of the WHO. Xi
is reported in state media as “personally commanding” the Chinese
response to the epidemic. State media also reports that Xi told Tedros
that “the Chinese government has released information about the
epidemic in a timely, open, transparent and responsible manner”.
29-30 China’s Supreme Court rebukes Wuhan police for suppressing “rumours”
January about the outbreak.
30 January Tedros Adhanom chairs a WHO meeting that declares an PHEIC. No
reference to Chinese delay and obfuscation.
3 February Chinese state media begin a propaganda on the merits of the CCP
response to the outbreak.
5 February First public appearance by Xi Jinping, who says that he knew about the
outbreak ahead of sounding the alarm.
6 February Dr Li Wenliang dies of COVID-19 infection complications.
Professor John Mackenzie, adviser to WHO Emergency Committee,
strongly criticises China’s failure to share timely information which could
have reduced deaths at home and abroad. Tedros Adhanom later shrugs
this off, saying that Mackenzie is not on the WHO staff.
7 February Wave of grief and anger rapidly builds across Chinese social media
before succumbing to censorship. The CCP’s Internal Disciple
Enforcement Agency announces investigation into “complaints by the
masses” regarding the persecution of Dr Li.
10 February Xi Jinping is shown, wearing a facemask, demonstrating command and
leadership of anti-COVID-19 activity.
12 February Sudden surge in reported number of new cases in Hubei (14,840 new
confirmed infections in one day) raises more foreign concern about
previous under-reporting.
Hours after new infections are confirmed in Hubei, top provincial and
municipal CCP leaders are sacked.
24 February Buying, selling, and eating of wildlife banned by the Chinese legal
authorities.
10 March As the outbreak begins to decline, Xi Jinping finally visits Wuhan.
11 March WHO declares a Global Pandemic.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
The COVID-19 pandemic originated in China, and the first government to become aware
of it was that run by Chinese Communist Party (CCP). From the outset, the CCP tried
to censor attempts by Chinese citizens to identify and publicise the truth concerning the
origins, nature and dangers of the virus. Not all of these censorship efforts succeeded,
and a considerable body of independent, corroborative data came to light. Though all
information in the Chinese official media is subject to CCP control and prima facie cannot be
trusted, carefully comparing demonstrably factual non-official data with suitably caveated
information from official channels makes it possible to construct a coherent, fact-based
picture of what actually happened, and hence to allocate responsibility.
The section below adopts this methodology to shed light on four crucial elements in the
emergence of COVID-19. These are first, the background to the repeated spread of lethal
animal pathogens into the human population in China and beyond; second, the sequence
of events at the outset of the epidemic, in which the Hubei and Wuhan authorities played
a significant tactical role in hushing it up and allowing it to escalate; third, the interaction
between Chinese authorities and the World Health Organization (WHO), leading to further
delay and obfuscation when clarity and decisive action were essential; and, finally, the way
in which the CCP leadership used all means at its disposal to promote its political agenda
instead of supporting the Chinese people and the rest of the world in dealing swiftly with
a global threat.
8
‘Population, total – China, World’, The World Bank, available at: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.
TOTL?locations=CN-1W, last visited: 28 March 2020.
9
Standaert, M., ‘Coronavirus closures reveal vast scale of China’s secretive wildlife farm industry’, The Guardian, 25
February 2020, available at: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/feb/25/Coronavirus-closures-reveal-
vast-scale-of-chinas-secretive-wildlife-farm-industry, last visited: 28 March 2020.
12
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
Many animals hunted or farmed for this market, including particularly civets, are hosts for
corona-type viruses capable of infecting humans, in some cases lethally.10 These viruses
are in a permanent state of mutation and recombination, so new strains lethal to humans
inevitably appear.11 The COVID-19 pandemic has a common genetic origin with the 2003
SARS epidemic, and both are linked biologically to the 2017 Swine Acute Diarrhoea
Syndrome (SADS) outbreak among intensively farmed pigs, though this did not transmit to
humans. A similar virus that emerged in the poultry sector has evolved and is now capable
of bridging to human victims.12 The movement of live animals carrying highly infectious new
pathogens to large, urban, so-called ‘wet’ markets facilitates the rapid spread of infection
among urban consumers and their contacts before vaccines can be developed.
Tourism, festival-related travel and migrant worker movement also increase the risk, scale
and spread of human infection by animal-linked pathogens and other types of infectious
diseases. Estimates suggest that in 2019 Chinese people made at least 150 million trips
overseas and more than six billion domestic journeys.13 Peaking around the Lunar New
Year, which usually occurs in late January to early February, pre-lockdown domestic travel
coinciding with high demand for exotic animal products created an environment in which
several key risk factors for infection operated in tandem. Around the same time, thousands
of flights from China to every continent facilitated onward transmission of the pathogen,
in the case of Italy in likely association with a large diaspora community from Zhejiang,
whither the COVID-19 virus rapidly spread from Hubei province.14 Italy is now in the grip of
the worst COVID-19 epidemic outside China. The first two cases registered in Italy, on 29
January, were two Chinese tourists who arrived in Milan on 23 January.15
The Chinese economy now relies on an estimated 291 million migrant workers,16 whose
lack of access to effective health care makes them particularly vulnerable to infectious
diseases.17 Involved in the 2020 Lunar New Year exodus from workplaces to home towns,
these workers were then trapped by the belated lockdown in areas likely to have exposed
them to infection by COVID-19 and have only gradually returned to work in hundreds of
major conurbations. They may prove to be a factor in any imminent resurgence of COVID-19.
10
Lui, Q., L. Cao and X Zhu, ‘Major emerging and re-emerging zoonoses in China: a matter of global health and
socioeconomic development for 1.3 billion’, International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 25 (August 2014), pp. 65-72,
available at: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971214014970, last visited: 28 March 2020.
11
Hu, B. et al, ‘Discovery of a rich gene pool of bat SARS-related coronaviruses provides new insights into the origin
of SARS coronavirus’, PLOS Pathogens, 30 November 2017, available at: https://journals.plos.org/plospathogens/
article?id=10.1371/journal.ppat.1006698, last visited: 28 March 2020.
12
Lui, Q., L. Cao and X Zhu, ‘Major emerging and re-emerging zoonoses in China: a matter of global health and
socioeconomic development for 1.3 billion’, International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 25 (August 2014), pp. 65-72,
available at: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971214014970, last visited: 28 March 2020.
13
‘3.08 billion domestic trips made in China in H1 2019’, CGTN, 3 August 2019, available at: https://news.cgtn.com/
news/2019-08-03/3-08-billion-domestic-trips-made-in-China-in-H1-2019-IRaUOHpCEg/index.html, last visited: 28
March 2020.
14
Lau, S. and M. Zuo, ‘Stay or go? Tough call for Chinese in Italy as coronavirus crisis hits’, South China Morning Post,
6 March 2020, available at: https://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/3073987/stay-or-go-tough-call-
chinese-italy-Coronavirus-crisis-hits, last visited: 28 March 2020.
15
‘Coronavirus, primi due casi in Italia «Sono due cinesi in vacanza a Roma» Sono arrivati a Milano il 23 gennaio’, Corriere,
30 January 2020, available at: https://www.corriere.it/cronache/20_gennaio_30/coronavirus-italia-corona-9d6dc436-
4343-11ea-bdc8-faf1f56f19b7.shtml, last visited: 30 March 2020.
16
Wang, O., ‘Coronavirus: more than two thirds of China’s migrant labourers not yet back at work’, South China Morning
Post, 18 February 2020, available at: https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-economy/article/3051175/Coronavirus-
more-two-thirds-chinas-migrant-labourers-not-yet, last visited: 28 March 2020.
17
Zheng, Y., Y. Ji, C. Chang and M. Liverani, ‘The evolution of health policy in China and internal migrants: Continuity,
change, and current implementation challenges’, Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies, 7:1 (January 2020), available at:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/app5.294, last visited: 28 March 2020.
13
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
1.2 The Role of Hubei Authorities in Downplaying the Early Seriousness of the Disease
Censorship and disinformation cloud the record of the crucial early stages of the COVID-19
outbreak before the confirmation that the pathogen was a new virus and before its
genome had been analysed. One media account – citing unpublished Chinese government
documents – states that the initial case was recorded in Wuhan on 17 November 2019.18
According to this source, the number of cases rose rapidly, reaching 266 on the last day of
December and 381 on the first day of 2020. At this stage the medical authorities withheld
authorisation to report the outbreak both internally and to the public, and no defensive
action was taken. Meanwhile, it was noted that two-thirds of a sample of victims could be
linked to the Huanan Market in Wuhan, which soon became accepted as the likely source of
the outbreak. This of course shows that one third were not.19 Since the market was closed
on 1 January, it seems reasonable to infer at least that subsequent cases could well be the
result of human-to-human transmission. This issue does not appear to have registered in
the WHO’s considerations
On 27 December, when – according to the unpublished Chinese government documents
– there were 181 cases overall, eminent virologist Dr Zhang Zhixian declared to the health
authorities that a new Coronavirus was responsible. She was the first to raise the alarm.20
On 30 December, probably based on Dr Zhang’s earlier briefing, Dr Li Wenliang wrote a
private note to colleagues referring to a new SARS-like outbreak, for which he was soon
afterwards summoned by authorities and obliged to sign an agreement to spread no more
disruptive rumours. On 31 December, the Chinese authorities notified the WHO.21 On the
same day, the Wuhan health authority issued a low-key public notice reporting 27 cases of
infection with a type of flu, without clear indications of transmission from human to human,
and advising anyone with a persistent fever to seek prompt medical assistance’.22
At this stage there were clear concerns within the medical community that the disease
was being passed from human to human, but this seems not to have been shared with
the WHO. The same day, the official Xinhua News Agency tendentiously reported that “all
cases found were related to a seafood market, and there were no clear signs of human-to-
human transmission”.23 This statement has since been deleted. As noted above, the suspect
market was closed on 1 January. But soon afterwards there was no doubt that the disease
was spreading between people. A patient who died on 9 January had already infected his
wife, according to data from a 24 January article in the Lancet24. Another western journal
reported that by 11 January there were seven infected health workers.25 Xinhua reported
such a case the same day.26 By this date, the Chinese authorities were, or ought to have
been, aware of human-to-human transmission.
18
Ma, J., ‘Coronavirus: China’s first confirmed Covid-19 case traced back to November 17’, South China Morning Post,
13 March 2020, available at: https://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/3074991/Coronavirus-chinas-first-
confirmed-COVID-19-case-traced-back, last visited: 28 March 2020.
19
‘Wuhan seafood market may not be source of novel virus spreading globally’, Science, 26 January 2020, available
at: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/01/wuhan-seafood-market-may-not-be-source-novel-virus-spreading-
globally, last visited: 30 March 2020.
20
Li, A. J., ‘Coronavirus crisis: How the death of Li Wenliang, a doctor and ordinary citizen, sparked Chinese demands
for freedom of speech’, South China Morning Post, 12 February 2020, available at: https://www.scmp.com/comment/
opinion/article/3049910/Coronavirus-crisis-how-death-li-wenliang-doctor-and-ordinary, last visited: 28 March 2020.
21
‘Pneumonia of unknown cause – China’, World Health Organization, 5 January 2020, available at: https://www.who.int/
csr/don/05-january-2020-pneumonia-of-unkown-cause-china/en/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
22
‘Wuhan Municipal Health Commission’s Notice On The Circumstances Of The Outbreak Of Pneumonia In Our
City’, Wuhan Municipal Health Commission, 31 December 2019, available at: http://wjw.wuhan.gov.cn/front/web/
showDetail/2019123108989, last visited: 30 March 2020.
23
‘Viral pneumonia cases reported in central China’ Xinhuanet, 31 December 2019, available at: http://www.xinhuanet.
com/english/2019-12/31/c_138669403.htm, last visited: 28 March 2020.
24
https://www.vox.com/2020/2/10/21124881/coronavirus-outbreak-china-li-wenliang-world-health-organization
25
Li, ‘Coronavirus crisis: How the death of Li Wenliang, a doctor and ordinary citizen, sparked Chinese demands for
freedom of speech’, South China Morning Post, 12 February 2020.
a
14
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
China provided the WHO with the COVID-19 genetic sequence on 10 January, but without
comprehensive data on how it was spreading. On 14 January, a WHO official said that
there had been “limited” human-to-human transmission. The same day this was withdrawn
by the WHO, which said there had been a misunderstanding and that there had been no
evidence of this.27 A dinner celebration for several tens of thousands was held in Wuhan
on 18 January. A few days later a city district where many of the attendees lived had to
be cordoned off.28 Later, the Mayor of Wuhan claimed that the party had gone ahead
because human-to-human transmission was then deemed to be “limited”. Xi Jinping did
not acknowledge the outbreak until 20 January. Wuhan was put into quarantine on 23
January. Around this time, the WHO decided not to declare a global health emergency,
largely because there was no evidence of person-to-person transmission. On 25 January,
the Chinese authorities admitted that an asymptomatic patient had infected all her family.29
Thus, potentially since 17 November but certainly since 30 December, China’s authorities
knew about the COVID-19 outbreak and did their very best to suppress information
about it.
1.3 How the Inaction of the Wuhan and Hubei Governments Allowed the Disease to Spread
When the WHO finally declared an international emergency on 30 January, the disease had
already been exported overseas from China. On 26 January, the Mayor of Wuhan admitted
on official media that five million people had left Wuhan prior to the imposition of the
quarantine.30 He said that his office had withheld information from the public and failed
to brief them in a timely manner. On 30 January, Dr Li Wenliang spoke to the New York
Times about official failures to disclose essential information about the virus to the public.31
He died of COVID-19 infection during the night of 6-7 February. On 31 January, the first two
cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the UK.
It is evident from this sequence of events that the Hubei authorities deliberately
understated the severity of the growing epidemic and allowed it to spread unchecked for
several weeks, particularly throughout the vital first fortnight of January, by which time it
was clearly spreading increasingly rapidly from person to person. The Mayor of Wuhan’s
acknowledgement that five million travellers left his city during this major incubation
window explains the subsequent spread of the disease inside China and overseas, leading
directly to the current pandemic.32 When Xi Jinping sent Premier Li Keqiang to impose a
rigorous lockdown in Wuhan and later across Hubei and beyond, the damage had already
been done. Whatever delaying effect the China-wide quarantine later had on infection and
the death toll within the country, the craven cowardice and defensive secrecy – framed by
fear of censure if mistakes were made – displayed by the Hubei provincial government and
Wuhan metropolitan government, in combination with inadequate engagement by China’s
senior leaders then and previously, led directly to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
26
Kynge, J., S. Yu and T. Hancock, ‘Coronavirus: the cost of China’s public health cover-up’, Financial Times, 6 February
2020, available at: https://www.ft.com/content/fa83463a-4737-11ea-aeb3-955839e06441, last visited: 28 March 2020.
27
ibid.
28
Kynge, J., S. Yu and T. Hancock, ‘Coronavirus: the cost of China’s public health cover-up’, Financial Times, 6 February
2020, available at: https://www.ft.com/content/fa83463a-4737-11ea-aeb3-955839e06441, last visited: 28 March 2020.
29
‘Coronavirus research: Woman with no symptoms infects five people’, Medical News Today, 24 February 2020, https://
www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/coronavirus-research-woman-with-no-symptoms-infects-five-people#Wuhan-
to-Anyang, last visited: 24 February 2020.
30
Fottrell, Q., ‘Mayor of Wuhan, epicentre of coronavirus outbreak, says 5 million people left the city before travel
restrictions were imposed’, MarketWatch, 28 January 2020, available at: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/mayor-
of-wuhan-epicenter-of-Coronavirus-outbreak-says-5-million-people-left-the-city-before-travel-restrictions-were-
imposed-2020-01-26, last visited: 28 March 2020.
31
Jian, M., ‘Xi Jinping has buried the truth about coronavirus’, The Guardian, 26 February 2020, available at: https://www.
theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/feb/26/the-reaction-to-the-outbreak-has-revealed-the-unreceonstructed-
despotism-of-the-chinese-state, last visited: 28 March 2020.
32
https://www.ft.com/content/fa83463a-4737-11ea-aeb3-955839e06441
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
Box 1:
The International Health Regulations (2005): What they entail
The International Health Regulations (IHR) were adopted by the World Health
Assembly, the decision-making body of the World Health Organisation (WHO), in
1969. These regulations are “designed to prevent the international spread of disease”
by placing obligations on states to prevent highly-transmissible diseases.33 The IHR
were revised in 2005, in response to the 2003 SARS outbreak, and entered into force
in 2007.
The IHR consist of ten parts, the second of which concerns information sharing and
public health responses to emerging health events. They require that states monitor
health events, notify the WHO of unexpected or unusual events, share full information,
consult with the WHO, and continue to provide up to date information throughout an
incident.34 In particular, Articles Five through Seven, contained within Part II, place
particular obligations on states with potential outbreaks.
Article Five requires that states maintain and implement the capacity to monitor
“disease or death above expected levels”.35 Details that must be monitored and
recorded include “clinical descriptions, laboratory results, sources and type of risk,
numbers of human cases and deaths, conditions affecting the spread of the disease
and the health measures employed”.36
Article Six requires that States first notify the WHO any health incident that satisfies
a prescribed risk indicator mechanism.37 It then requires the State to provide “timely,
accurate and sufficiently detailed public health information available to it” including
each of the pieces of information set out in Article 5.38 It also requires States, where
necessary, to provide where necessary details about its need for assistance.
Article Seven extends the data-sharing obligations required under Article Six to any
circumstances in which a State “has evidence of an unexpected or unusual public
health event within its territory… which may constitute a public health emergency
of international concern.”39 A “public health emergency of international concern” is
earlier defined by Article One as:
an extraordinary event which is determined, as provided in these Regulations:
(i) to constitute a public health risk to other States through the international
spread of disease and
(ii) to potentially require a coordinated international response.40
Put simply, the IHR require a State to monitor and share data related to the spread,
severity, and transmission of any pathogens that are potentially transmissible
internationally.
33
International Health Regulations (2005), Foreword.
34
International Health Regulations (2005), Articles 5-12.
35
International Health Regulations (2005), Article 5 and Annex 1.
36
International Health Regulations (2005), Annex 1.
37
International Health Regulations (2005), Article 6
38
Ibid.
39
International Health Regulations (2005), Article 7
40
International Health Regulations (2005), Article 1
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
41
Wilder-Smith, A., Chiew, C., and Lee, V., ‘Can we contain the COVID-19 outbreak with the same measures as for SARS?’
The Lancet, avaiable at: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30129-8/fulltext, last
visited: 30 March 2020.
42
Kynge, Yu and Hancock, ‘Coronavirus: the cost of China’s public health cover-up’, Financial Times, 6 February 2020.
43
ibid.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
crossing the borders to other countries.” He said that the current number of cases overseas
was “very small”. A review might at some future date be undertaken “to see if something
was hidden or not”.44
A WHO mission team visited China from 16 to 24 February 2020 to investigate the outbreak
and the Chinese response, as they acknowledged, seven weeks after the outbreak started.
Their report is publicly available and makes salutary reading.45 On return, comments to
media were universally positive. A senior WHO official who had been on the mission told
the press that the Chinese authorities had adopted a “rigorous” approach, saying: “They
know what they are doing and they are really, really good at it.”46 Dr Bruce Aylward, leader
of the mission, commented to reporters:
the Chinese government is to be congratulated for the extraordinary measures
it has taken to contain the outbreak … We would have seen many more cases
outside China by now, and probable deaths, if it were not for the government’s
efforts and the progress they have made to protect their own people and the
people of the world. The speed with which China detected the outlook, isolated
the virus, sequenced the genome and shared it with the WHO and the world
is really very impressive, and beyond words. So is China’s commitment to
transparency.47
The 40-page mission report makes not a single reference to the IHR or to China’s obligations
to comply with IHR norms.48 In the same vein as Dr Aylward’s comments above, the report
is effusively positive and congratulatory throughout. Comments on information transfer
and gaps include neither concerns nor complaints of any kind. Subsequent events have
challenged the WHO’s positive interpretation of how the Chinese authorities handled the
outbreak, but the official position of the WHO in this regard does not seem to have altered.
There may at some future date be an opportunity to inquire into what has at times appeared
to be a marked predisposition on the part of the current WHO leadership to extol the CCP’s
virtues and ignore its palpable errors.49
As the evidence and Professor Mackenzie’s criticism shows, a case that China was in breach
of its IHR commitments can be made, but at this stage the international body responsible
for enforcing the IHR – the WHO – has given no indication of an intention to do so. The
material presented in this paper, drawing on extensive data from China, shows that both
the Wuhan government and the central authorities deliberately misreported the nature,
scale and risk of the emerging epidemic at the crucial early stages, while themselves issuing
official apologies addressing some of these failings on local and national media. As a result,
the virus was not contained, was spread abroad and has caused a pandemic. If the IHR were
designed to prevent such an eventuality and the WHO’s role is to ensure that this happens,
neither seems fit for purpose.
44
Ravelo, J. L., ‘Tedros addresses criticism against China coronavirus response’, Devex, 6 February 2020, available at:
https://www.devex.com/news/tedros-addresses-criticism-against-china-Coronavirus-response-96518, last visited: 28
March 2020.
45
‘Report of the WHO–China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)’, 16-24 February 2020, available at:
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/Coronaviruse/who-china-joint-mission-on-COVID-19-final-report.pdf, last
visited: 28 March 2020.
46
Bollyky, T. J. and V. Gupta, ‘What the World Can Learn From China’s Experience with Coronavirus’, Foreign Affairs,
2 March 2020, available at: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/china/2020-03-02/what-world-can-learn-chinas-
experience-Coronavirus, last visited: 28 March 2020.
47
Belluz, J., ‘China hid the severity of its coronavirus outbreak and muzzled whistleblowers – because it can’, Vox, 10
February 2020, available at: https://www.vox.com/2020/2/10/21124881/Coronavirus-outbreak-china-li-wenliang-
world-health-organization, last visited: 28 March 2020.
48
‘Report of the WHO–China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)’, 16-24 February 2020.
49
‘Fighting the Coronavirus Pandemic: China’s Influence at the World Health Organization’, Institut Montaigne, 23 March
2020, available at: https://www.institutmontaigne.org/en/blog/fighting-Coronavirus-pandemic-chinas-influence-
world-health-organization, last visited: 28 March 2020.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
Box 2:
Case study: how missing medical data hampered the UK response
The effect of the early inadequate and inaccurate information released by the CCP
was keenly felt during the early reaction and preparation of the UK.
The first official response to the emergence of COVID-19 came in an extraordinary
meeting of the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group
(NERVTAG), convened at the request of the Department of Health and Social
Care (DHSC) on 13 January 2020.50 NERVTAG is a body tasked with advising the
Government on the development of its response to prospective outbreaks. The DHSC
relied on advice from NERVTAG in order to make changes to public health advice
and equipment guidance for the NHS. While NERVTAG’s meetings are by no means
representative of Government thinking, their public minutes are nevertheless a useful
indication.
At the time of NERVTAG’s first meeting, NERVTAG was acting on WHO reports. These
reports were based on Chinese data which said, at that point, there were no cases of
medics contracting the diseases; there had been 41 cases of COVID-19 between 8
December 2019 and 2 January 2020; and, there has been no additional cases since 3
January 2020.51 All of this was untrue.
The reports shared with NERVTAG stated there “has been no ‘significant’ human to
human transmission”, although members of the Group did note that this implied there
may have been some evidence of limited human to human transmission. Yet, “based
on current available information” available, NERVTAG concluded that “the risk to the
UK population is considered: Very Low”.52 Accordingly, the Group recommended no
changes to UK border policy on screening or travel advice to British nationals.
When the NERVTAG met again a fortnight later on 21 January, the picture was
markedly different: “the reported number of confirmed global cases had increased
to 283, with 279 in mainland China”.53 Crucially it was noted that “human to human
transmission had now been reported overnight, including 15 healthcare workers”.54 Yet,
the minutes record that members noted “these HCW cases are thought to be due to a
single superspreading event in a neurosurgical unit, with no PPE [personal protective
equipment] worn by HCWs [healthcare workers] or other patients”.55 Nevertheless, it
was acknowledged that human-to-human transmission was occurring, even if there
was much uncertainty as to how transmissible the disease was.
The most significant uncertainty appeared to concern a WHO modelling discussion “on
whether this was a zoonotic outbreak with some human to human transmission, or a
seeded outbreak from zoonotic reservoir but with self-sustaining human transmission”.
The latter was true and – by this stage – well known in China. NERVTAG, however,
noted that “it was concluded by the WHO modelling group that the currently available
data did not make it possible to distinguish between the two scenarios”.
50
Public Health England, Minutes of the NERVTAG Wuhan Novel Coronavirus Meeting: 13 January 2020.
51
Ibid.
52
Ibid.
53
Public Health England, Minutes of the NERVTAG Wuhan Novel Coronavirus Meeting: 21 January 2020.
54
Ibid.
55
Ibid.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
56
Public Health England, Minutes of the NERVTAG Wuhan Novel Coronavirus Meeting: 28 January 2020.
57
Ibid.
58
Public Health England, Minutes of the NERVTAG Wuhan Novel Coronavirus Meeting: 30 January 2020.
59
Ibid.
60
Garrett, L., ‘How China’s Incompetence Endangered the World’, FP, 15 February 2020, available at: https://foreignpolicy.
com/2020/02/15/coronavirus-xi-jinping-chinas-incompetence-endangered-the-world/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
control the outbreak had worked.61 But, at the same time, a Beijing-based media company
reported that one radiologist in Wuhan had personally detected 50 new cases in one day.62
Another source refers to a public warning on 18 January that the virus was passing from
person to person.63 That night an annual mass banquet took place in Wuhan’s Baibuting
district for 40,000 guests, many of whom were soon in quarantine.64
But this is not the whole story. In Beijing on 7 January, the CCP’s main theoretical journal,
Qiushi (‘Seeking Facts’), began to publish timelines of Xi’s engagement with efforts to
contain the outbreak.65 Though this was not mentioned at the time, a transcript of a speech
by Xi on 3 February referred to a statement he had made on 7 January, at a meeting of the
CCP Politburo standing Committee, when he had “issued requirements for the prevention
and control of the new Coronavirus”.66
On 20 January, Zhong Nanshan, a scientist famous for his expertise on SARS, announced
on state television that the COVID-19 virus could be passed from human to human.67 The
same day, Xi made his first public statement on the crisis. According to Xinhua, the state
news agency, he stressed “the need for the timely release of information” to the public to
ensure social stability for an auspicious and peaceful New Year holiday.68 The two tourists
who became Italy’s first COVID-19 cases left China on 22 January, reaching Milan the next
day.69 On 25 January, Lunar New Year’s Day, Xi is reported to have chaired a meeting
of the seven-man CCP Politburo Standing Committee, the summit of power in China. He
later referred to this meeting in his 3 February speech which was published in great detail,
most unusually, on 15 February.70 Xi reportedly said that he had given orders on fighting
the epidemic at a meeting on 7 January and had personally ordered the imposition of
quarantine on Wuhan on 22 January.
Since 25 January, Xi had said, the outbreak had been his greatest concern. Despite this, on
27 January Xi made his deputy, Premier Li Keqiang, responsible for the campaign against
COVID-19. Xi again spoke of his personal commitment to dealing with the epidemic to
Tedros Adhanom when they met on 28 January. Adhanom’s comments on China’s handling
of the crisis under Xi’s supervision were, as usual in his approach to China, elaborately
complimentary.71
61
Garrett, L., ‘How China’s Incompetence Endangered the World’, Foreign Policy, 15 February 2020, available at: https://
foreignpolicy.com/2020/02/15/coronavirus-xi-jinping-chinas-incompetence-endangered-the-world/, last visited: 30
March 2020.
62
Kynge, Yu and Hancock, ‘Coronavirus: the cost of China’s public health cover-up’, Financial Times, 6 February 2020.
63
Belluz, ‘China hid the severity of its coronavirus outbreak and muzzled whistleblowers – because it can’, Vox, 10 February
2020
64
Kynge, Yu and Hancock, ‘Coronavirus: the cost of China’s public health cover-up’, Financial Times, 6 February 2020.
65
‘Xi Details Early Hands-On Approach in Virus Fight, Risking Anger’, Bloomberg, 15 February 2020, available at: https://
www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-02-15/xi-details-hands-on-approach-in-virus-fight-from-early-january, last
visited: 28 March 2020.
66
Griffiths, J., ‘Did Xi Jinping know about the coronavirus outbreak earlier than first suggested?’, CNN, 17 February 2020,
available at: https://edition.cnn.com/2020/02/17/asia/china-Coronavirus-xi-jinping-intl-hnk/index.html, last visited: 28
March 2020.
67
Kynge, Yu and Hancock, ‘Coronavirus: the cost of China’s public health cover-up’, Financial Times, 6 February 2020.
68
‘Xi orders resolute efforts to curb virus spread’, Xinhuanet, 20 January 2020, available at: http://www.xinhuanet.com/
english/2020-01/20/c_138721535.htm, last visited: 28 March 2020.
69
‘Coronavirus, primi due casi in Italia «Sono due cinesi in vacanza a Roma» Sono arrivati a Milano il 23 gennaio’, Corriere,
30 January 2020, available at: https://www.corriere.it/cronache/20_gennaio_30/coronavirus-italia-corona-9d6dc436-
4343-11ea-bdc8-faf1f56f19b7.shtml, last visited: 30 March 2020.
70
‘Xi Details Early Hands-On Approach in Virus Fight, Risking Anger’, Bloomberg, 15 February 2020.
71
‘Xi Jinping meets with visiting World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus’,
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China, 29 January 2020, available at: https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/
mfa_eng/zxxx_662805/t1737014.shtml, last visited: 28 March 2020.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
The body of evidence concerning the interplay between the CCP’s top leadership and the
provincial and municipal party and governments of Hubei is relatively sparse. Extensive
commentary in secondary sources typically interprets what happened as an initial phase of
clumsy local repression to stop bad news escalating up the chain of command (a standard
phenomenon under China’s authoritarian system) followed by a lurch into crisis and disarray
resolved by a senior visitor (Premier Li Keqiang) and a dramatic attempt to bolt the stable
doors via a draconian lockdown, too late in Hubei but arguably more effective where fewer
victims of infection had been free to travel and spread the epidemic.
However, the suggestion that, on 7 January, Xi was in charge of a highest-level meeting and
explicitly took command of the campaign appears to conflict with the above interpretation.
Since this report cannot have been issued without Xi’s approval, it shows that Xi is prepared
to be seen to carry responsibility for the conduct of the CCP response from very near
the start of the outbreak, which includes a period when millions of unwitting people were
allowed to surge in and out of the centre of a nascent epidemic and many were infected,
who later left to spread the disease across China and, soon after, the world.
At the least, this underscores a simple and crucial point: the CCP could have taken timely
steps to contain the spread of the virus, but, for reasons that may never be clear, it wittingly
failed to do so. As such, the CCP bears full responsibility for the consequences.
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CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
The Peoples’ Republic of China (PRC) has long sought to eschew legal accountability for
its actions. It is not unique in this respect. Like other authoritarian states, the PRC abides
by laws and treaties when Beijing believes that it is in its interests to do so, and ignores
them when it is not. However, the reality of the rules-based international order is that even
a State as averse to the rule of law as China has engendered a series of potential liabilities.
These potential legal avenues fall into two broad categories. The first are available within
the world’s system of international justice. The second exist within the domestic courts of
other nations.
Blanket exemptions to these avenues of action are substantive. Sovereign immunity, or the
principle that sovereign states should not be subject to jurisdiction of foreign courts in non-
commercial matters, is a longstanding one. In the UK, it dates back to the acts of supremacy
in the sixteenth century, if not earlier still. Likewise, some members of the international
community have held firmly to the principle that they will not make themselves subject
to proceedings in international courts and have carefully avoided clauses in treaties that
would have this effect. Yet, with decades of growth of international law, routes may have
emerged to hold the PRC to account.
This section sets out avenues that could exist to file disputes against the PRC (or actors
close to it) for its role in the COVID-19 pandemic. It is not for this chapter to assess the
prospects for any such claim - nor does it seek to do so. Such prospects would depend on
questions of jurisdiction and admissibility of claims, as well as the legal and factual merits
of the case. The purpose here is to outline some of the legal routes that should be explored
by nations, corporations, and individuals injured by the COVID-19 outbreak.
72
‘International Law Commission, Articles on State Responsibility’, ICRC Law, available at: https://casebook.icrc.org/
case-study/international-law-commission-articles-state-responsibility, last visited: 28 March 2020.
73
‘Global Health Histories: Origin and development of health cooperation’, World Health Organization, available at:
https://www.who.int/global_health_histories/background/en/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
74
International Health Regulations (2005), Article 58. Members of the Pan American Health Organization are also subject
to the provisions of the Pan American Sanitary Code, which confers further requirements.
23
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
the event of a “dispute between two or more States Parties concerning the interpretation
or application of these Regulations”.75
In the first instance, states agree to seek “to settle the dispute through negotiation or
any other peaceful means of their own choice, including good offices, meditation or
conciliation”.76 In the event that states are unable to settle disputes through this mechanism,
they may agree to refer the dispute to the Director-General for resolution. A state may, at
any point, declare that it accepts arbitration (subject to the Permanent Court of Arbitration
Optional Rules for Arbitrating Disputes Between Two States) to be binding. Such a case
is yet to be litigated, so it is unclear whether the WHO would conduct such an arbitration
itself or refer it to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague. In any event, a State
Party is not bound to accept any arbitration as binding without a unilateral declaration that
it does so.77
While levelling a claim of dispute under the IHR would be unprecedented, there is an initial
framework for bringing suit within the structures of the WHO. This would be a readily
accessible avenue for states bringing complaints in relation to the handling of the COVID-19
pandemic. In the first instance, an injured party would need to notify the State Party that
it contends has breached the Regulations of a dispute before escalating it to the Director-
General of the WHO and seeking compulsory arbitration.
Also of note is Section 5 of Article 56, which affords a vehicle to resolve disputes between
member states and the WHO. States that have a dispute with the WHO that concerns
the “interpretation or application of these Regulations” can refer matters to the Health
Assembly. A state could therefore refer the WHO’s response, statements and decision
making to the Health Assembly. All 194 members of the WHO are members of the Health
Assembly.
75
International Health Regulations (2005), Article 56 (1).
76
ibid.
77
International Health Regulations (2005), Article 56 (3).
78
‘Chapter VXI: The International Court of Justice’, United Nations, available at: https://www.un.org/en/sections/un-
charter/chapter-xiv/index.html, last visited: 28 March 2020.
79
‘The Court’, International Court of Justice, available at: https://www.icj-cij.org/en/court, last visited: 28 March 2020.
80
‘Declarations recognizing the jurisdiction of the Court as compulsory’, International Court of Justice, available at:
https://www.icj-cij.org/en/declarations, last visited: 28 March 2020.
81
https://www.icj-cij.org/en/treaties
24
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
China’s conduct in the initial stages of the Covid-19 outbreak violated – as outlined in Box
1 – the IHR, in particular Articles 5, 6, and 7. While Article 56 of the IHR provides a dispute
settlement mechanism, it does so only in the event that China consents. One way around
the issue of obtaining China’s consent could be to bring a case to the ICJ through Article
75 of the World Health Organization’s Constitution.82 This Article provides: “Any question
or dispute concerning the interpretation or application of this Constitution which is not
settled by negotiation or by the Health Assembly shall be referred to the International
Court of Justice…”.83
The Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA), a body that emerged from the 1899 Hague
Peace Conference, is another avenue for settling legal disputes between nations.84 The rules
of the PCA require that notice of a potential claim is transmitted to the Court authorities
and to the opposing party. The rules specify that such a notice must include:
(a) A demand that the dispute be referred to arbitration;
(b) The names and contact details of the parties;
(c) Identification of the arbitration agreement that is invoked;
(d) Identification of any rule, decision, agreement, contract, convention, treaty,
constituent instrument of an organization or agency, or relationship out of, or in
relation to which, the dispute arises;
(e) A brief description of the claim and an indication of the amount involved, if any;
(f) The relief or remedy sought;
(g) A proposal as to the number of arbitrators, language and place of arbitration, if
the parties have not previously agreed thereon.85
The PCA applies similar principles to the ICJ on jurisdiction in that it requires all the parties
to settle a dispute under these rules.86 Unlike the ICJ, however, the PCA effectively manages
disputes that are brought to it by parties. In this sense, the PCA serves as a secretariat that
facilitates ad hoc arbitrations that take place under it aegis.
82
Tzeng, P. ‘Taking China to the International Court of Justice over COVID-19’, EJIL:Talks!, 2 April 2020, available
at: https://www.ejiltalk.org/taking-china-to-the-international-court-of-justice-over-covid-19/, last accessed: 2 April
2020
83
‘Constitution of the World Health Organisation’, October 2006, available at: https://www.who.int/governance/eb/
who_constitution_en.pdf, last accessed: 2 April 2020.
84
‘History’, Permanent Court of Arbitration, available at: https://pca-cpa.org/en/about/introduction/history/, last visited:
28 March 2020.
85
‘Permanent Court of Arbitration: Arbitration Rules 2012’, Permanent Court of Arbitration, available at: https://pca-cpa.
org/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2015/11/PCA-Arbitration-Rules-2012.pdf, last visited: 28 March 2020.
86
ibid.
87
‘Dispute Settlement’, World Trade Organization, available at: https://wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/dispu_e.htm,
last visited: 28 March 2020.
88
‘Understanding the WTO: Settling Disputes’, World Trade Organization, available at: https://wto.org/english/thewto_e/
whatis_e/tif_e/disp1_e.htm, last visited: 28 March 2020.
25
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
In the past, the WTO’s dispute resolution mechanism has been used as a vehicle to raise
disputes that are not strictly trade related. A series of disputes have been filed at the WTO
related to the ongoing hostilities between Qatar and the other Gulf states.89 This has led
to claims – notably from the US – that the WTO has engaged in judicial overreach.90 It
might be possible, therefore, for a case to brought to the WTO that in its handling of the
COVID-19 outbreak, China deviated from its obligations under the WTO.
89
‘‘Dispute Settlement: DS567: Saudi Arabia – Measures concerning the Protection of Intellectual Property Rights’, World
Trade Organization, available at: https://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/cases_e/ds567_e.htm, last visited: 28
March 2020. See also, ‘Dispute Settlement: DS576: Qatar – Certain measures concerning goods from the United Arab
Emirates’, World Trade Organization, available at: https://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/cases_e/ds576_e.
htm, last visited: 28 March 2020.
90
‘Statements by the United States at the Meeting of the WTO Dispute Settlement Body’, 28 October 2019, available at:
https://geneva.usmission.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/290/Oct28.DSB_.Stmt_.as-deliv.fin_.public.pdf, last visited:
28 March 2020.
91
‘Dispute settlement provisions in international investment agreements: A large sample survey’, OECD, 2012, available
at: http://www.oecd.org/investment/internationalinvestmentagreements/50291678.pdf, last visited: 28 March 2020.
92
‘Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs)’, Investment Policy Hub, available at: https://investmentpolicy.unctad.org/
international-investment-agreements/countries/42/china, last visited: 28 March 2020.
93
‘Agreement between the Government of the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland and the Government of the People’s
Republic of China concerning the Promotion and Reciprocal Protection of Investments’, 15 May 1986, available at:
https://investmentpolicy.unctad.org/international-investment-agreements/treaty-files/793/download, last visited: 28
March 2020.
94
‘Dutch court backs $50bn Yukos claim against Russia’, BBC News, 18 February 2020, available at: https://www.bbc.
co.uk/news/world-europe-51547011, last visited: 30 March 2020.
95
‘Downing Street says China faces a ‘reckoning’ over their handling of coronavirus and risks becoming a ‘pariah state’
as Boris Johnson faces pressure to scrap the Huawei deal’, Mail on Sunday, 28 March 2020, available at: https://www.
dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8163767/Downing-Street-says-China-faces-reckoning-coronavirus.html, last visited 29
March 2020.
26
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
96
‘6. United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea’, United Nations Treaty Collection, available at: https://treaties.
un.org/Pages/ViewDetailsIII.aspx?src=TREATY&mtdsg_no=XXI-6&chapter=21&Temp=mtdsg3&clang=_en, last visited:
28 March 2020.
97
‘List of Cases’, International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, available at: https://www.itlos.org/cases/list-of-cases/, last
visited: 28 March 2020.
98
‘United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea’, Permanent Court of Arbitration, available at https://pca-cpa.org/
en/services/arbitration-services/unclos/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
99
‘Chapter XIV: The International Court of Justice’ United Nations, available at: https://www.un.org/en/sections/un-
charter/chapter-xiv/index.html, last visited: 28 March 2020.
27
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
100
ord Lloyd-Jones, ‘Forty Years On: State Immunity and the State Immunity Act 1978’, British Institute of International
L
and Comparative Law Grotius Lecture, Goodenough College, London, 18 October 2018, available at: https://www.
supremecourt.uk/docs/speech-181018.pdf, last visited: 28 March 2020.
101
‘China’, Global Health and Human Rights Database, available at: https://www.globalhealthrights.org/category/asia/
china/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
102
‘Clean Air Foundation LTD and Another v. The Government of the HKSAR’, Global Health and Human Rights Database,
2007, available at: https://www.globalhealthrights.org/asia/clean-air-foundation-ltd-and-another-v-the-government-
of-the-hksar/, last visited: 28 March 2020. ‘Wu Zhongze, et al. v. Shanghai Institute of Biological Products [WZZ等诉上海
生物制品研究所人身损害赔偿案]’, Global Health and Human Rights Database, available at: https://www.globalhealthrights.
org/asia/wu-zhongze-et-al-v-shanghai-institute-of-biological-products/, last visited: 28 March 2020. See also,
103
‘KZM v. Shanghai Institute of Biological Products [KZM诉上海生物制品研究所人身损害赔偿案]’, Global Health and Human
Rights Database, available at: https://www.globalhealthrights.org/asia/kzm-v-shanghai-institute-of-biological-
products/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
104
‘ Zheng Xuefeng and Chen Guoqing v . People’ s Hospital of Jiangsu Province [郑雪峰、陈国青诉江苏省人民医院医疗服务
合同纠纷案)]’, Global Health and Human Rights Database, available at: https://www.globalhealthrights.org/asia/zheng-
xuefeng-and-chen-guoqing-v-people-s-hospital-of-jiangsu-province/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
28
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
105
‘State Immunity Act 1978’, legislation.gov.uk, available at: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/33, last visited: 28
March 2020.
106
‘Foreign States Immunities Act 1985’, Federal Register of Legislation, available at: https://www.legislation.gov.au/
Details/C2016C00947, last visited: 28 March 2020.
107
Lloyd-Jones, ‘Forty Years On’, 18 October 2018.
108
‘Class Action Complaint’, United States District Court Southern District of Florida, available at: https://images.law.com/
contrib/content/uploads/documents/392/85094/Coronavirus-China-class-action.pdf, last visited: 28 March 2020.
109
ibid, p. 8.
29
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
The lawsuit suggests a number of reasons for the outbreak, including the widely discredited
theory that COVID-19 was developed at a biological weapons laboratory, but it does not
argue that the outbreak started one way or another, or that one country or another was
responsible for the spread of the outbreak. Instead, the lawsuit simply argues that the
Chinese government did not handle the initial outbreak correctly. This mishandling, the
lawsuit claims, is why the outbreak is now a pandemic.
The lawsuit alleges that the Chinese government:
acting from their own economic self-interest and looking to protect their place
as a super-power, failed to report the outbreak as quickly as they could have;
underreported cases; and failed to contain the outbreak despite knowing the
seriousness of the situation.110
The obvious issue, as noted above, is that the government of China is protected by the
doctrine of sovereign immunity, which the US took to be absolute in 1952. This led to
the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) being passed in 1976. The Florida lawsuit
attempts to get around this by asserting that an exception applies within the FSIA for
commercial activities.
The FSIA’s parameters were amended in 2016, when the Justice Against Sponsors of
Terrorism Act (JASTA) was passed, which narrows the scope of the legal doctrine of foreign
sovereign immunity.111 Specifically, the Act allows the court jurisdiction over foreign powers
in actions brought for injury in the US caused by an act of terrorism.
This has allowed some victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks and families of victims to bring
a lawsuit in the Southern District of New York against Saudi Arabia and the Saudi High
Commission for relief in Bosnia and Herzegovina for – allegedly – “directly and knowingly
assist[ing] the hijackers and plotters who carried out the attacks”. The lawsuit was initially
brought in 2003 but was dismissed because of sovereign immunity. The plaintiffs appealed,
and during their appeal JASTA was adopted. The case was remanded to the district court
to consider Saudi Arabia’s immunity in light of the new legislation,112 and in 2018 a judge
denied Saudi Arabia’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit. The case is ongoing.
In much the same way as FSIA was amended in 2016, the exemptions contained within the
Act could be further expanded by Congress so as to cover further forms of liability, which
could apply in the case of Covid-19. Lawmakers who seek to develop mechanisms to hold
China judicially responsible could seek to introduce new legislation for this purpose. They
could also revisit the US reservation to the IHRs to remove any obstacle to the Regulations
being used in pursuit of judicially enforceable private rights.
An additional note is that the principle of sovereign immunity applies only to the State.
If there were to be non-State or State-linked bodies in China who acted in a manner that
could engage a claim in a domestic court, avenues for domestic claims may arise.
110
ibid.
111
‘Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act’, US Government, available at: https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/
PLAW-114publ222/pdf/PLAW-114publ222.pdf, last visited: 28 March 2020.
112
‘Consolidated Complaint’, United States District Court Southern District of New York, available at: https://static1.
squarespace.com/static/57fbbfa88419c2de35c1639d/t/58d03556ff7c50abde86720f/1490040171270/Ashton-v-
KSA-2017.pdf, last visited: 28 March 2020.
30
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
31
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
While China’s regime’s negligence has resulted – and will continue to result – in the
significant loss of human life, the economic costs are also likely to be significant. According
to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), global economic
growth is expected to decline as a result of the broader impact of Coronavirus.113 Some
countries are predicted to enter recession during the second quarter of 2020 and to
experience no growth or even recession during 2020. As Table 1 shows, Italy and Japan
are expected to be hit the hardest, with annual projected growth rates of -0.4% and -0.2%,
respectively, for 2020.114 Consequently, the OECD has warned governments around the
world to “act swiftly and forcefully to overcome the COVID-19 and its economic impact”.115
Table 1:
OECD Economic Forecasts for China and the G7 in 2020, October 2019 v. March 2020
COVID-19 will not only undermine global economic growth, but it will also force the
governments of major advanced economies – such as those of the G7 – to take robust
economic measures to overcome the human and economic cost of the contagion. As the
world’s major advanced economies shut down and entire nations go into various forms of
lockdown, measures to provide enhanced social security will have been required. While
these measures are far from complete, initial steps have been taken, with the majority
having been put in place during the third week of March 2020.
On 18 March 2020, the government of Justin Trudeau in Canada outlined its economic
response to COVID-19. This package includes more than £47.9 billion (CAN$82 billion)
in direct measures in support of Canada’s healthcare and social security system, with an
additional £291.8 billion (CAN$500 billion) pledged in loan guarantees and other financial
support.116 To put this in perspective, Canada’s Gross National Income (GNI) amounted to
£1.3 trillion (CAN$2.2 trillion) in 2018.117
113
‘Coronavirus: The world economy at risk’, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, March 2020,
available at: https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/7969896b-en.pdf, last visited: 28 March 2020.
114
ibid, p. 2.
115
ibid.
116
‘Prime Minister announces more support for workers and businesses through Canada’s COVID-19 Economic Response
Plan’, Government of Canada, 18 March 2020, available at: https://pm.gc.ca/en/news/news-releases/2020/03/18/
prime-minister-announces-more-support-workers-and-businesses-through, last visited: 28 March 2020.
117
’GNI (current LCU) – Canada’, The World Bank, 2020, available at: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GNP.MKTP.
CN?locations=CA, last visited: 28 March 2020.
32
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
In France, President Emmanuel Macron pledged more than £272.9 billion (€300 billion)
in financial assistance to help underwrite loan guarantees on 16 March 2020. This was
followed a day later, on 17 March, by an announcement by Bruno Le Maire, the Finance
Minister, that the French treasury would provide an additional £40.9 billion (€45 billion) in
direct assistance to France’s health and social security systems.118 In 2018, France’s GNI was
£2.2 trillion (€2.4 trillion).119
Germany, under Chancellor Angela Merkel, approved a national response to COVID-19 in
late March 2020. After a fortnight of speculation, the German government “launched the
largest assistance package in the history of the Federal Republic”.120 On 25 and 26 March
2020, the German Parliament approved a package that included £44.8 billion (€50 billion)
of support for micro businesses and self-employed persons; £54.9 billion (€61.3 billion) (with
an additional £4.5 billion (€5 billion) from health insurance providers) to cover healthcare;
up to £736.3 billion (€822 billion) in support of loan programmes; £89.6 billion (€100 billion)
to protect large companies from foreign takeovers; £89.6 billion (€100 billion) to refinance
loan programmes that have already been adopted; and £6.7 billion (€7.5 billion) to allow
self-employed persons to access basic benefits for jobseekers.121
Italy, hit hardest globally in terms of the death rate from COVID-19, announced a broad
rescue package on 19 March 2020.122 The Italian Ministry of Finance’s initial response is
worth £22.7 billion (€25 billion), which includes £2.9 billion (€3.2 billion) to cover health
and civil protection, £9.4 billion (€10.3 billion) in social security, £1.5 billion (€1.6 billion)
for tax incentives, and £4.6 billion (€5.1 billion) to pump up to £318.3 billion (€350 billion)
of liquidity to help businesses and households.123 In 2018, Italy’s GNI was £1.6 trillion (€1.8
trillion).124
The government of Japan has yet to announce its formal package of measures, but they are
expected to run into trillions of yen, with £113.4 billion (¥15 trillion) of direct measures and
a further £113.4 billion (¥15 trillion) of indirect measures, such as loan guarantees.125 Japan
will take a particularly heavy hit in 2020 because it was due to host the 2020 Olympic
Games in Tokyo, which have been postponed until Summer 2021.126 Japan is unlikely to
118
raun, E., ‘France injects billions into stimulus plan amid coronavirus chaos’, Politico, 21 March 2020, available at: https://
B
www.politico.eu/article/france-injects-billions-into-stimulus-plan-amid-Coronavirus-chaos-bruno-le-maire-economic-
catastrophe/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
119
‘GNI (current LCU) – France’, The World Bank, 2020, available at: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GNP.MKTP.
CN?locations=FR, last visited: 28 March 2020.
120
‘FAQs: Multibillion-euro protective shield for Germany’, Federal Ministry of Finance (Germany), 27 March 2020, available
at: https://www.bundesfinanzministerium.de/Content/EN/FAQ/faq-corona.html, last visited: 28 March 2020.
121
ibid.
122
As of 25 March 2020, Italy had reported more than 6,200 deaths from Coronavirus. See: Gulland, A., R. Moynihan and
B. Riddy, ‘Coronavirus world map: live tracker of reported Covid-19 cases and deaths’, The Telegraph, 28 March 2020,
available at: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/global-health/science-and-disease/Coronavirus-world-map-live-covid-19/,
last visited: 28 March 2020.
123
‘Protect health, support the economy, preserve employment levels and incomes’, Ministry of the Economy and Finance
(Italy), 19 March 2020, available at: http://www.mef.gov.it/en/inevidenza/Protect-health-support-the-economy-
preserve-employment-levels-and-incomes-00001/, last visited: 28 March 2020.
124
‘GNI (current LCU) – Italy’, The World Bank, 2020, available at: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GNP.MKTP.
CN?locations=IT, last visited: 28 March 2020.
125
Kihara, L., ‘Japan to spend over $137 billion as virus hits economy, BOJ eyes more stimulus’, Reuters, 23 March 2020,
available at: https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-health-Coronavirus-japan-debt/japan-to-spend-over-137-billion-as-
virus-hits-economy-boj-eyes-more-stimulus-idUKKBN21A16L, last visited: 28 March 2020.
126
‘Joint statement from the International Olympic Committee and the Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee’, Olympic
Games, 24 March 20202, available at: https://www.olympic.org/news/joint-statement-from-the-international-olympic-
committee-and-the-tokyo-2020-organising-committee, last visited: 28 March 2020.
33
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
recoup the £11 billion (¥1.45 trillion) it has sunk into the games, not least because fewer
tourists are expected owing to the global economic fallout caused by the virus.127 Japan’s
GNI was £4.3 trillion (¥569.3 trillion) in 2018.128
On 11 March 2020, Chancellor Rishi Sunak delivered his budget for 2020, outlining the first
£12 billion in support for COVID-19 for the UK. £5 billion was earmarked to cover health and
social security, with an additional £7 billion to support business and the economy.129 Later,
on 17 March 2020, the Chancellor announced that the British government’s response would
expand by an additional £330 billion in broader support of the economy, particularly in
terms of underwriting loan guarantees.130 A final package of £9 billion was announced on
26 March 2020 to cover the income of self-employed workers.131 In 2018, the GNI of the UK
stood at £2.1 trillion.132
The US response to COVID-19 has emerged over a series of phases, each designed to
provide support to America’s health and social security systems. The first and second
phases provided £7 billion (US$8.3 billion) and £84.2 billion (US$100 billion), respectively,
in assistance, while the third phase, the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security
Act, approved by the US Senate and US House of Representatives on 25 and 27 March,
respectively, provides in excess of £842.1 billion (US$1 trillion) in fiscal stimulus.133 This third
phase, one of the largest in US history, would be broken down into £421 billion (US$500
billion) in economic impact payments, £252.6 billion (US$300 billion) in small business
interruption loans, £126.3 billion (US$150 billion) to help industries (e.g. hotels, malls)
directly affected by COVID-19 and £42.1 billion (US$50 billion) in bailouts for airlines.134 US
GNI was £17.5 trillion (US$20.8 trillion) in 2018.135
While it is far from clear what the final cost of COVID-19 will be, particularly in terms of
economic growth, it is possible to calculate the cost of the initial economic responses
of the G7 nations. Together, the G7 will spend more than £3.2 trillion (US$4 trillion) to
meet the direct economic cost of COVID-19, including health and social security, as well as
underwriting loan guarantees and broader financial support to prevent the global economy
from entering a period of deep recession.
127
ancian, D., ‘Postponing Olympic Games will deal serious blow to Japanese economy and plunge country into recession,
C
analysts warn’, Newsweek, 24 March 2020, available at: https://www.newsweek.com/olympics-games-2020-tokyo-
postponed-financial-impact-ioc-1493926, last visited: 28 March 2020..
128
‘GNI (current LCU) – Japan’, The World Bank, 2020, available at: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GNP.MKTP.
CN?locations=JP, last visited: 28 March 2020.
129
‘Chancellor delivers Budget 2020’, HM Treasury, 11 March 2020, available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/
chancellor-delivers-budget-2020, last visited: 28 March 2020.
130
‘Chancellor announces additional support to protect businesses’, HM Treasury, available at: https://www.gov.uk/
government/news/chancellor-announces-additional-support-to-protect-businesses, last visited: 28 March 2020.
131
Morales, A., L. Meakin and A. Atkinson, ‘UK Virus Aid Package Beats Financial Crisis Stimulus’, Bloomberg, 27 March
2020, available at: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-03-26/u-k-s-sunak-pledges-coronavirus-
support-for-self-employed, last visited: 27 March 2020.
132
‘GNI (current LCU) – United Kingdom’, The World Bank, 2020, available at: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/
NY.GNP.MKTP.CN?locations=GB, last visited: 28 March 2020.
133
Treene, A., ‘The growing coronavirus stimulus packages’, Axios, 19 March 2020, available at: https://www.axios.com/
Coronavirus-stimulus-packages-compared-7613a16f-56d3-4522-a841-23a82fffcb46.html, last visited: 28 March 2020.
134
Treene, A., ‘McConnell releases Phase 3 coronavirus stimulus proposal’, Axios, 19 March 2020, available at: https://www.
axios.com/mcconnell-Coronavirus-stimulus-bill-4d9aa679-d6a5-446a-a911-bc3b966c5a4e.html, last visited: 28 March
2020.
135
‘GNI (current LCU) – United States’, The World Bank, 2020, available at: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GNP.
MKTP.CN?locations=US, last visited: 28 March 2020.
34
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
And the figure of £3.2 trillion only represents the outlay of the G7, which itself no longer
represents the seven largest economies in the world nor all of the countries which have,
thus far, been most affected by the outbreak. Other large economies are also likely to
be hit hard. Australia and Poland, for example, have announced £29.9 billion (AU$60.3
billion) and £42.3 billion (zł212 billion) in economic measures, respectively.136 Given how
many countries other than the G7 (and Australia and Poland) will be affected by COVID-19,
the figure of £3.2 trillion may be eclipsed several times over.
Meanwhile, as Table 1 shows, China is likely to suffer a far smaller reduction in a far higher
level of economic growth, despite being the place where COVID-19 started.137
136
or Australia’s measures, see ‘Economic Response to the Coronavirus’, Australian Government, 2020, available at: https://
F
treasury.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-03/Overview-Economic_Response_to_the_Coronavirus.pdf, last visited: 28
March 2020. For Poland’s response, see ‘Premier: Tarcza antykryzysowa pomoże przedsiębiorcom i pracownikom
[Prime Minister: The anti-crisis shield will help entrepreneurs and employees]’, Prime Minister of Poland, available at:
https://www.premier.gov.pl/wydarzenia/aktualnosci/premier-tarcza-antykryzysowa-pomoze-przedsiebiorcom-i-
pracownikom.html, last visited: 28 March 2020.
137
‘
Coronavirus: The world economy at risk’, OECD, (2020), available at: https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/
docserver/7969896b-en.pdf, last visited: 25 March 2020.
35
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
36
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
4. CONCLUSION
In a world in which authoritarian states often act with impunity, it is tempting to forget
that the rules-based international order places obligations on everyone. The Peoples’
Republic of China (PRC) is no exception to this rule. International law – in the form of
Treaties, Covenants and Charters – places obligations on China, just as much as it does on
the democracies of the West.
It is without doubt that the early reporting of COVID-19 was slower than it might have been.
Early cases emerged between mid-November and early December. By 27 December, one
Chinese doctor had confirmed that the cause of this infection was a novel Coronavirus.
By 11 January, seven health workers had become infected, proving beyond doubt that the
disease spreads among humans. It was not until 23 January that Wuhan, the source of the
outbreak, was put into quarantine. The day before, a Chinese couple had arrived in Italy, to
become that country’s first COVID-19 cases. During the run up to the lockdown, five million
people – equivalent to a city five times the size of Birmingham – left Wuhan.138 Eight days
later, the first two cases were identified in the UK.
In prospective pandemic scenarios, rapid reporting matters. To contain a virus, swift action
based on accurate information is required. Accordingly, the world instituted the International
Health Regulations, which require states to provide prompt, accurate and full accounts of
emerging infections. This paper makes a convincing case that, in its early response, Wuhan
and Hubei breached these Regulations. It also makes clear that responsibility goes to the
top of the regime. Accordingly, it appears more than probable that the CCP’s response to
COVID-19 was in breach of international law.
The Chinese government’s negligence has cost the G7 at least £3.2 trillion (US$4 trillion) –
and the wider world a presently incalculable sum.
While it appears evident that the PRC is in patent breach of international law, and that this
breach contributed to the spread of the disease, it does not necessarily follow that China
can be easily held to account. China has for many decades fastidiously avoided forms of
international jurisdiction. Yet the field of public international law has developed something
of an art form of identifying inventive legal avenues to pursue legal accountability.
This paper identifies ten possible legal avenues by which the wider world can pursue
China for the damages inflicted by its response (or lack of) to the COVID-19 outbreak.
Policymakers may wish to pursue them for two reasons.
First, the costs of responding to this pandemic are vast. They extend far beyond the costs
incurred by governments. They will have to – at some point – be repaid, presumably by
taxpayers. Given that these costs were incurred – at least in part – as a consequence of
wrongful acts by a nation state, many will consider it just that that state pays for the
consequences.
The second is that in order for the rules-based international order to mean anything, it must
be upheld. Revisionist powers like Russia and China have exploited the world’s inability to
enforce norms for some time. The COVID-19 outbreak is different, however. Here, the breach
of international law has devastated the global economy, killed thousands and changed the
lives of millions. If the world does not act in response to this breach of international law,
that begs the question when it will.
138
2011 Census.
37
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
Taking action would require both courage and global solidarity. China has a record
for responding aggressively to threats on the world stage. Consequently, it would be
advantageous for any action to carry the support of the widest possible range of claimants,
potentially acting under the auspices of an international body. Should this not be possible,
nations may be required to stand alone in the defence of the rules-based international
order. The battle that would ensue would be nothing, if not historic.
38
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
39
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
40
CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE
41
Title: “CORONAVIRUS COMPENSATION? The Henry Jackson Society
ASSESSING CHINA’S POTENTIAL CULPABILITY Millbank Tower, 21-24 Millbank
AND AVENUES OF LEGAL RESPONSE” London SW1P 4QP, UK
By Matthew Henderson, Dr Alan Mendoza, www.henryjacksonsociety.org
Dr Andrew Foxall, James Rogers,
and Sam Armstrong
© The Henry Jackson Society, 2020
April 2020