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World

No, Countries Were Not Buying COVID-19 Test Kits in 2018

Posts from a World Bank-linked website are viral with a claim that countries were purchasing COVID-19 test kits in 2018.

By - AFP | 10 Sep 2020 10:03 PM GMT

Facebook posts sharing images of tables from a World Bank-linked website alongside the claim that they prove countries were purchasing Covid-19 test kits in 2018 are false. The tables actually list the imports and exports of medical devices that existed in 2018 and which were classified as "Covid-19 products" in April 2020 because of their use in fighting the pandemic, according to the World Bank.

"This is incredibly strange! World Bank website shows COVID-19 testing kits purchased by countries in 2017 and in 2018," claims a September 6, 2020 Facebook post from Ben Swann, which has been shared thousands of times. 

Swann, who describes himself as a "journalist who speaks truth to power" and recently promoted the widely debunked film "Plandemic: Indoctornation," goes on to claim: "I have verified that this is in fact posted on the World Banks World Integrated Trade Solution (WITS) website," focusing on product code 382200. 


Screenshot of a Facebook post taken on September 9, 2020

The same product code could also be found in Facebook posts in English, including here and here, and in Arabic here

Posts making similar claims, but with a focus on product number 300215, circulated on Facebook in Australia and in Italy, and on Twitter in Spanish


Screenshot of a Facebook post taken on September 9, 2020

AFP Factuel also found posts in French, with a focus on product code 902780.

The tables are real and could be found on the WITS website. Archived versions can be found here and here.

WITS is a joint initiative of the World Bank, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, and the World Trade Organization (WTO), among others, providing data on trade and tariffs.

However, it does not prove that countries were buying test kits for Covid-19 prior to the detection of Sars-Cov-2 in December 2019 in China.

Asked on September 8, 2020 by AFP, the World Bank said that the products with the mention "Covid-19" in the WITS database corresponded to medical equipment used for a long time for other purposes, but which has been of particular importance during the pandemic.

These items "have been classified as Covid-19 products by the World Customs Organization (WCO)" to facilitate monitoring their movements.

"In April, the World Customs Organization assembled a list of Harmonized System codes to enable countries to track and expedite the exchange of essential products related to Covid-19," the World Bank said.

In this list are "dozens of medical instruments used to diagnose or treat Covid -- such as respirators which, as we all know, existed long before the pandemic," it explained.

Product codes

According to WCO, product code 382200 corresponds to "diagnostic reagents based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR) nucleic acid test." Similarly, code 300215 also tracks "diagnostic reagents based on immunological reactions."


Screenshot of the World Customs Organization
Organization HS classification reference for Covid-19 medical supplies

Code 902780 helps track "instruments used in clinical laboratories for in Vitro Diagnosis," which the World Bank said is "intended to help healthcare professionals quickly check whether patients are properly connected to a ventilator."

In a statement released on September 8, the World Bank further clarified that because of misinformation posted on social media, the WITS site was "updated to reflect the reality: COVID-19 tests did not exist before 2020.

What a few days ago was labeled on WITS as a 'COVID-19 Test Kit' (using the WCO label) is now correctly labeled on the WITS COVID section as 'Medical Tests.'" 

The novel coronavirus pandemic has killed at least 904,000 people worldwide as of September 10. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by BOOM staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)