An Australian microbiologist appointed to the World Health Organisation (WHO) team investigating the origins of the CCP virus has said he thinks the contagion originated from bats in China. Prof. Dominic Dwyer, a microbiologist from Sydney, told 9News after returning home from the month-long investigation that there was “very limited” evidence it originated outside China. “There is some evidence, but it’s not really very good,” he said. He has concluded that the virus originated in bats, which often carry other viruses closely related to the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus. The virus then likely went through an intermediate animal like a pangolin or a cat where it can replicate. “We know that other viruses like MERS and SARS, back in 2003, also came from bats. Now these bats don’t respect borders of course, so they are present not just in China but in other parts on South …