Conservative leadership candidate Peter MacKay and two Conservative MPs have joined over 100 politicians and world leaders in condemning China’s coronavirus coverup.

The Macdonald-Laurier Institute (MLI) listed Mackay and Conservative MP James Bezan as signatories to the letter on Wednesday afternoon. MLI also confirmed with True North that Conservative MP John Williamson has also agreed to sign the condemnation and would be added alongside the other names.

MacKay is the second former justice minister to sign onto the list. Former justice minister for the Paul Martin government Irwin Cotler was one of the many original signatories to the document.

Meanwhile, Bezan and Williamson are the first sitting Canadian members of parliament to have signed the letter.

“The Chinese Communist Party dictatorship is built on force and intimidation of the Chinese people and ethnic minorities. Its rulers have no fidelity to individual freedoms, transparency or the rule of law,” Williamson told True North.

“Beijing needs to be held accountable for its actions, at home and abroad, and not be treated as an ordinary member of the international community. I believe Canada’s ‘business as usual’ with mainland China should end.”

True North reached out to MacKay and Bezan about their support for the letter but had not heard back in time.

The letter, which is written in both English and Chinese, blames the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the World Health Organisation for downplaying the pandemic and severity of the coronavirus.

“The roots of the pandemic are in a cover-up by CCP authorities in Wuhan, Hubei province. Under the influence of the CCP the World Health Organisation first downplayed the pandemic,” claimed the letter.

“Taiwanese health officials also allege that they ignored their alerts of human-to-human transmission in late December. Under pressure from the CCP, democratic Taiwan—which has coped with the pandemic in exemplary fashion—is excluded from the WHO.”

According to the Associated Press, China waited six whole days before warning the world of a possible pandemic.

Despite the fact that Chinese officials knew that the coronavirus would likely escalate into a pandemic by mid-January, they continued to downplay the virus’ severity in the public.

The WHO also parroted China’s false claim that the virus was not spreading through human-to-human transmission in a January 14 tweet.

Preliminary investigations conducted by the Chinese authorities have found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission of the novel #coronavirus (2019-nCoV) identified in #Wuhan, #China🇨🇳. pic.twitter.com/Fnl5P877VG — World Health Organization (WHO) (@WHO) January 14, 2020

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has failed to answer questions about the credibility of the original data coming out of China during the early stages of the pandemic. Trudeau has stood by his government’s support of the WHO, despite the fact that US President Donald Trump has cut funding to the UN organization due to its handling of the pandemic response.

“Of course, in the coming months and years there will be many reflections on various institutions and systems, both domestically and internationally on how we can improve our response, on how we can learn from things we could have done better in this process,” said Trudeau.

“These are things that will come in the coming times. Right now our focus needs to be on doing the best we can right now to protect Canadians.”