
Trump orders curb on virus research he blames for Covid pandemic
Donald Trump has long supported the theory that Covid-19 leaked from the Wuhan lab research, not from natural animal-to-human transmission. (Freepik pic)
WASHINGTON : US President Donald Trump on Monday ordered new limitations on a form of biological research his administration says caused the Covid-19 pandemic through a lab leak in China.
The US will halt funding in certain countries for so-called 'gain-of-function' experiments – aimed at enhancing the properties of pathogens – according to an executive order Trump signed Monday at the White House.
'There's no laboratory that's immune from leaks – and this is going to prevent inadvertent leaks from happening in the future and endangering humanity,' Health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. wrote on X.
'Any nation that engages in this research endangers their own population, as well as the world, as we saw during the Covid pandemic,' added Jay Bhattacharya, director of the National Institutes of Health.
Trump has long championed the theory that SARS-CoV-2 leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology as a result of gain-of-function research – an alternative to the theory that the virus spilled over naturally from wild animals to humans at a seafood market in the same city.
The US government website Covid.gov, which previously focused on promoting vaccine and testing information, is now devoted to highlighting arguments that favour the lab leak.
Several US agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Energy, and, most recently, the Central Intelligence Agency – which shifted its stance under Trump's second term – now lean toward a lab origin. Several other intelligence agencies favour natural spillover.
During the 2010s, the National Institutes of Health funded bat coronavirus research at the Wuhan Institute via the US-based nonprofit EcoHealth Alliance – a grant axed by Trump in 2020 during his first term, but later partially restored under president Joe Biden.
Complicating matters, former top infectious disease official Anthony Fauci has maintained that the work in Wuhan did not meet the federal definition of gain-of-function, though some virologists and US officials have disputed that claim.
Trump's order names China as an example of a 'country of concern' where such research should not be supported.
The order also seeks to end funding for other types of life sciences research in countries deemed to lack sufficient oversight, significantly broadening the types of foreign research that could be targeted.
It further calls for the development of a strategy to 'govern, limit, and track dangerous gain-of-function research across the US that occurs without federal funding' – though the extent of the government's control over non-federal research is unclear, and the order also calls for new legislation to fill any gaps.
Trump's executive order comes amid broader efforts by his administration to reshape American science and health policy, including mass firings to government scientists and steep slashes to research budgets.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Malay Mail
37 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
South Korea's president Lee seeks quick tariff resolution in first call with Trump
SEOUL, June 7 — US President Donald Trump and South Korea's new president Lee Jae-myung agreed to work toward a swift tariff deal in their first phone call since Lee was elected this week, Lee's office said yesterday. Trump has imposed tariffs on South Korea, a long time ally with which it has a bilateral free trade deal, and pressed it to pay more for the 28,500 US troops stationed there. Separately, Trump allies have aired concerns about Lee's more conciliatory stance towards China, Washington's main geopolitical rival. Lee, a liberal, was elected on June 3 after former conservative leader, Yoon Suk Yeol, was impeached and ousted. The future of South Korea's export-oriented economy may hinge on what kind of deal Lee can strike with Trump, with all of his country's key sectors from chips to autos and shipbuilding heavily exposed to global trade. His term began on Wednesday. 'The two presidents agreed to make an effort to reach a satisfactory agreement on tariff consultations as soon as possible that both countries can be satisfied with,' Lee's office said in a statement. 'To this end, they decided to encourage working-level negotiations to yield tangible results.' Trump invited Lee to a summit in the US and they plan to meet soon, according to a White House official. Analysts say the first opportunity for the two to meet could be at a G7 summit in Canada in mid-June. Lee's office said the two leaders also discussed the assassination attempts they both experienced last year as well as their enthusiasm for golf. Lee underwent surgery after he was stabbed in the neck by a man in January last year, while Trump was wounded in the ear by a bullet fired by a would-be assassin in July. South Korea, a major US ally and one of the first countries after Japan to engage with Washington on trade talks, agreed in late April to craft a 'July package' scrapping levies before the 90-day pause on Trump's reciprocal tariffs is lifted, but progress was disrupted by the change of governments in Seoul. Lee said on the eve of the elections that 'the most pressing matter is trade negotiations with the United States.' Lee's camp has said, however, that they intend to seek more time to negotiate on trade with Trump. While reiterating the importance of the US-South Korea alliance, Lee has also expressed more conciliatory plans for ties with China and North Korea, singling out the importance of China as a major trading partner while indicating a reluctance to take a firm stance on security tensions in the Taiwan Strait. Political analysts say that while Trump and Lee may share a desire to try to re-engage with North Korea, Lee's stance on China could cause friction with the US. A White House official said this week that South Korea's election was fair, but expressed concern about Chinese interference in what analysts said may have been a cautionary message to Lee. Speaking in Singapore last week, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said many countries were tempted by the idea of seeking economic cooperation with China and defense cooperation with the United States, and warned that such entanglement complicated defense cooperation. — Reuters

Malay Mail
37 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
US job market cools but resilient for now despite Trump tariffs
WASHINGTON, June 7 — US hiring eased in May but remained resilient, government data showed yesterday, in a gradual slowdown amid business uncertainty while scrutiny intensifies over the effects of President Donald Trump's widespread tariffs. Hiring in the world's largest economy came in at 139,000 last month, down from a revised 147,000 figure in April, said the Labor Department. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.2 per cent, while pay gains exceeded expectations at 0.4 per cent. The figures indicate that the employment market remains healthy despite jolts to financial markets, supply chains and consumer sentiment this year as Trump announced successive waves of tariffs. Trump touted the 'great job numbers' on his Truth Social platform. But there appears to be softening. Taken together, job growth in March and April was revised lower by 95,000, yesterday's report said. Shortly after its publication, Trump urged Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to go for a 'full point' rate cut, calling Fed chief 'a disaster' and again applying political pressure on the independent central bank. But Fed officials are taking a cautious approach as they monitor the tariffs' impact on inflation. Trump has imposed a 10 per cent levy on most trading partners and unveiled higher rates for dozens of economies, but experts say their effects take time to filter through. This is partly because of the president's on-again, off-again approach to the trade war. His higher blanket tariff rates, although announced in April, were swiftly halted until early July, allowing room for negotiations. Trump's tit-for-tat escalation with China brought both sides' levies on each other's products to triple digits too in April, a level effectively acting as a trade embargo. But the countries reached a deal to temporarily lower duties in May. 'Tough summer' For now, economists are keeping tabs on signals that US employers might be pulling back on hiring. 'This is an 'abundance of caution economy' where businesses are only filling critical positions and job seekers, especially recent graduates, are struggling to find employment,' said Heather Long, chief economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union. She noted that nearly half the job gains were in health care, while the federal government continues to lose workers. Federal government employment was down by 59,000 since January. 'A recession does not look imminent, but it will be a tough summer for anyone looking for full-time work,' Long said in a note. Economist Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics said the labor market was 'cracking, but not crumbling yet.' While the market is slowing, the pace of cooling remains too gradual for the Fed to reduce interest rates at upcoming meetings. Officials have been awaiting more clarity on how much Trump's new tariffs might lift inflation. Tombs warned that revisions to May's employment data could 'reveal a sharper slowdown.' On Wednesday, data from payroll firm ADP showed that private sector employment cooled to 37,000 in May, down from 60,000 in the prior month and marking its slowest rate since 2023. Initial jobless claims picked up in the week ending May 31, with economists warning that this could be a sign of a weakening labor market in response to Trump's tariffs and the resulting uncertainty. Anecdotal data such as the Fed's beige book survey of economic conditions and recent surveys of businesses have also indicated the levies are causing many firms to pause investment and hiring. All these mean that such effects could soon show up in government employment numbers. 'Certainly, employment growth is going to slow down over the next few months,' said Dan North, senior economist at Allianz Trade North America. 'We just haven't seen the full effect of the tariffs, and we probably won't for a few more months, especially given that they're so choppy, on and off,' North told AFP. — AFP


Malay Mail
an hour ago
- Malay Mail
Trump slams Musk over spending bill row, calls him ‘man who lost his mind'
WASHINGTON, June 7 — US President Donald Trump said yesterday that Elon Musk had 'lost his mind' but insisted he wanted to move on from the fiery split with his billionaire former ally. The blistering public break-up between the world's richest person and the world's most powerful is fraught with political and economic risks all round. Trump had scrapped the idea of a call with Musk and was even thinking of ditching the red Tesla he bought at the height of their bromance, White House officials told AFP. 'Honestly I've been so busy working on China, working on Russia, working on Iran... I'm not thinking about Elon Musk, I just wish him well,' Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One en route to his New Jersey golf club late Friday. Earlier, Trump told US broadcasters that he now wanted to focus instead on passing his 'big, beautiful' mega-bill before Congress—Musk's harsh criticism of which had sparked their break-up. But the 78-year-old Republican could not stop himself from taking aim at his South African-born friend-turned-enemy. 'You mean the man who has lost his mind?' Trump said in a call with ABC when asked about Musk, adding that he was 'not particularly' interested in talking to the tycoon. Trump later told Fox News that Musk had 'lost it.' Just a week ago Trump gave Musk a glowing send-off as he left his cost-cutting role at the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) after four months working there. While there had been reports of tensions, the sheer speed at which their relationship imploded stunned Washington. After Musk called Trump's spending bill an 'abomination' on Tuesday, Trump hit back in an Oval Office diatribe on Thursday in which he said he was 'very disappointed' by the entrepreneur. Trump's spending bill faces a difficult path through Congress as it will raise the US deficit, while critics say it will cut health care for millions of the poorest Americans. The row then went nuclear, with Musk slinging insults at Trump and accusing him without evidence of being in government files on disgraced financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Trump hit back with the power of the US government behind him, saying he could cancel the Space X boss's multi-billion-dollar rocket and satellite contracts. Trump struck a milder tone late Friday when asked how seriously he is considering cutting Musk's contracts. 'It's a lot of money, it's a lot of subsidy, so we'll take a look—only if it's fair. Only if it's to be fair for him and the country,' he said. Musk apparently also tried to de-escalate social media hostilities. The right-wing tech baron rowed back on a threat to scrap his company's Dragon spacecraft—vital for ferrying NASA astronauts to and from the International Space Station. And on Friday the usually garrulous poster kept a low social media profile on his X social network. But the White House denied reports that they would talk. 'The president does not intend to speak to Musk today,' a senior White House official told AFP. A second official said Musk had requested a call. Tesla giveaway? Tesla stocks tanked more than 14 percent on Thursday amid the row, losing some US$100 billion of the company's market value, but recovering partly Friday. Trump is now considering either selling or giving away the cherry red Tesla S that he announced he had bought from Musk's firm in March. The electric vehicle was still parked on the White House grounds yesterday. 'He's thinking about it, yes,' a senior White House official told AFP when asked if Trump would sell or give it away. Trump and Musk had posed inside the car at a bizarre event in March, when the president turned the White House into a pop-up Tesla showroom after viral protests against Musk's DOGE role. But while Trump appeared to hold many of the cards, Musk also has some to play. His wealth allowed him to be the biggest donor to Trump's 2024 campaign, to the tune of nearly US$300 million. Any further support for the 2026 midterm election now appears in doubt—while Musk could also use his money to undermine Trump's support on the right. — AFP