Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) are calling for an international probe into how Beijing’s initial handling of the CCP virus pandemic may have endangered the United States and the rest of the world.
In a resolution introduced in both chambers on March 24, the lawmakers asked Congress to condemn the Chinese regime for its coverup of the outbreak, which “almost certainly” heightened the rapid global spread of the CCP virus, they said.
Congress should also quantify the damage of such acts on the health and economic being of afflicted nations, the resolution states.
The resolution—one of three legislative proposals introduced that day that focuses on the Beijing regime—also calls on the international community to design a mechanism for the CCP to deliver compensation accordingly.
Media reports have detailed how Chinese authorities censored critical information when the virus first emerged in the city of Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province.
“There is no doubt that China’s unconscionable decision to orchestrate an elaborate coverup of the wide-ranging and deadly implications of coronavirus led to the death of thousands of people, including hundreds of Americans and climbing,” Stefanik said.
“Since day one, the Chinese Communist Party intentionally lied to the world about the origin of this pandemic,” Hawley said.
“Allowing American taxpayers’ money to go to companies owned by the Communist Chinese government is antithetical to our ‘America First’ agenda,” he said in a statement.
Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) on March 24 called the CCP’s handling of the outbreak “one of the worst coverups in human history.”
“This is a systematic whitewash of what the Communist Party has done in China,” he told Fox News. He added that the virus “is now wreaking havoc all across the world, costing not only the lives of people but economic chaos.”
For “the harm, loss, and destruction their arrogance brought upon the rest of the world,” China will need to pay, Stefanik said.
“Simply put—China must, and will, be held accountable,” she said.