WHO chief: what rest of world can learn from China’s fight against coronavirus
- Bruce Aylward who led a team of specialists that visited Wuhan said he was convinced that the measures adopted were working
- He told a press conference in Beijing that people should not despair because ‘there is something that can be done’

Bruce Aylward, the leader of World Health Organisation team that visited the country earlier this month, arrived amid widespread scepticism about its efforts to stop the spread of Covid-19.
But by the end of the visit he was telling the world that its “aggressive” and “tailored” approach, including “old-fashioned” methods could teach the rest of the world valuable lessons.
“It’s not to praise China, it’s to open the door, and have the rest of the world realise there is something that can be done as people are starting to despair over what can we do,” Aylward told a press conference in Beijing on Monday.
“What China has demonstrated is, you have to do this. If you do it, you can save lives and prevent thousands of cases of what is a very difficult disease.”
More than 3,000 cases of coronavirus infection have now been reported outside mainland China, including 54 deaths.