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Minutes of silence, flags at half mast, sirens … China pays tribute to its dead


Coronavirus: Minutes of silence, flags at half-mast, sirens … China pays tribute to its dead – 20 minutes

AT Wuhan, where the pandemic started, the inhabitants remained frozen in the streets. And everywhere else in the country, at 10 am local time, the sirens sounded for three minutes, while the cars, trains and boats sounded their horns.
China observe this Saturday a day of national mourning in tribute to the more than 3,300 people who died of
coronavirus in the country.

The latest assessment, in China, is 81,639 contaminations, including 3,326 fatal.

Silence on Tiananmen

At Tongji Hospital in Wuhan, on the front line against Covid-19, medical staff stood headlong in front of the main building, some wearing white protective overalls. “I feel a lot of sadness for our colleagues and patients who have died,” nurse Xu, a nurse at the facility, told AFP, trying to hold back her tears. “I hope they rest in peace up there. “

In the capital Beijing, motorists stopped their vehicles to honk their horns and pedestrians remained motionless on the sidewalk, some with their shopping bags in their hands. In Tiananmen Square, the red national flag with five yellow stars was flown at half-mast – as in the whole country. President Xi Jinping for his part gathered with the other main communist leaders in the vast Beijing complex that houses the seat of power, according to images from national television CCTV. Out of respect for the dead, China on Saturday banned all public leisure activities for its 1.4 billion people. Even some Chinese online video games have been made inaccessible.

Li Wenliang and the other “martyrs”

The meditation is also in memory of the 14 people qualified Thursday by the government as “martyrs” of the epidemic. These are mainly deceased healthcare workers. Among them is the doctor Li Wenliang, died of Covid-19 in Wuhan. The 34-year-old ophthalmologist was reprimanded by the police for spreading what they called “rumors”. He had in fact alerted colleagues to the spread of a SARS-like virus.

His death in early February had sparked public outcry and a frenzy of rare magnitude against the government. The government has since restored the doctor’s honor in hopes of quelling popular anger.

Cemeteries in video stream and digital candles

This day of meditation coincides with the feast of Qingming, the “Chinese All Saints Day”, where people generally go to maintain the graves of their deceased relatives. However, the authorities, who fear a second epidemic wave, want to avoid excessive displacement and have encouraged the population to hold commemorative ceremonies at home.

Cemeteries offer families the opportunity to honor their ancestors by watching a live video stream showing personnel caring for the graves in their place. Some websites even offer to maintain a “virtual” grave, where you can light a digital candle.

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