JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — China has filed a retaliatory lawsuit seeking roughly $50 billion in damages against the state of Missouri, sharply escalating a years-long legal dispute tied to the origins and handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The lawsuit, filed in a court in Wuhan, names multiple Chinese government entities and institutions as plaintiffs, including the Wuhan municipal government and the Wuhan Institute of Virology. It targets the State of Missouri and several current and former U.S. officials, arguing that Missouri’s COVID-related litigation caused severe economic and reputational harm to China.
Chinese authorities accuse Missouri of abusing the legal system to advance “politically motivated” claims that undermined China’s sovereignty and damaged its international standing. The suit seeks financial damages, legal costs, and public apologies.

Roots of the Dispute
The case is a direct response to Missouri’s lawsuit filed in 2020, which accused the Chinese government of mishandling the early outbreak of COVID-19 and hoarding protective medical equipment, allegedly worsening the pandemic’s impact on the state.
Earlier this year, a U.S. federal judge issued a default judgment of roughly $24 billion in Missouri’s favor after Chinese defendants declined to participate in the proceedings. Missouri officials have since taken steps to explore enforcement of that judgment, including identifying Chinese-linked assets.
Missouri Pushes Back
Missouri officials dismissed China’s lawsuit as a stalling tactic. State leaders said the filing does not deter their efforts to collect on the U.S. judgment and described the Chinese case as an attempt to intimidate American courts and lawmakers.
“This is lawfare, plain and simple,” one Missouri official said, arguing the lawsuit is meant to deflect scrutiny over China’s early pandemic response.

Broader Implications
Legal experts note that the Chinese lawsuit faces major jurisdictional and enforcement hurdles, particularly given questions of sovereign immunity and whether a Chinese court can meaningfully impose damages on a U.S. state.
Still, the filing underscores how pandemic-era grievances continue to strain U.S.-China relations, adding a new legal front to disputes already fueled by trade, technology, and national security tensions.
The case marks one of the most aggressive legal moves by China against a U.S. state and signals that the fight over COVID-19 accountability remains far from settled.
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