Journal Pioneer

Montague man worries about his wife and daughter trapped at the centre of the coronaviru­s outbreak in China Filled with fear

- DAVE STEWART Dave.stewart@theguardia­n.pe.ca Twitter.com/DveStewart

A Montague man is sick with worry knowing his family is trapped in Wuhan.

Monte Gisborne, who operates the Chinese Junk Boat business in the summer at Peakes Quay Marina in Charlottet­own, said his wife, Daniela (Luo Dan Ni), and his step-daughter, Dominica (Li Qin Lin), went over to see family and celebrate the Chinese new year on Jan. 17.

He has spent much of his days face-timing his girls since, talking to them almost every hour.

“Oh, deeply worried, deeply,’’ Gisborne told The Guardian in a telephone interview from Vancouver where he’s found temporary work. “They’re my life. These girls are everything to me. We have a wonderful life together.’’

Daniela and Dominica arrived in China on Jan. 19 and were to return to Canada on Feb. 15, but not long after they landed Daniela realized how serious the situation was becoming with the coronaviru­s outbreak.

“We started getting a heavy-duty feed of bad news, and the situation seemed to worsen there,’’ Gisborne said.

Daniela immediatel­y exchanged her plane tickets for a return flight on Jan.

28. However, the Chinese government shut everything down on Jan. 23.

Gisborne said communicat­ion with the Chinese and Canadian government has been sketchy, convoluted and cryptic.

“Every form letter starts the same way, that the Canadian government believes in keeping families together. It’s hard to understand where my family lies. I can assure you they have not told us to get ready to come home.’’

Media stories reported Wednesday that only Canadian residents and permanent residents with children are permitted to leave Wuhan. Gisborne said that is false. His family members are permanent residents and aren’t being allowed out.

“(Those reports) gave my wife and daughter false hope. Then, I got this form letter from the government that explains the deal. If I had travelled to Wuhan with them, we would all be coming back. But I didn’t, and now they’re keeping the permanent residents over there. You have to have one Canadian in your family group to be coming back.’’

While Daniela and her daughter have not contracted the coronaviru­s, it has still struck close to home for her. Her mother’s best friend died as a result of the virus, as did a former classmate who worked as a doctor at the Wuhan Hospital.

“It’s not too good,’’ Daniela told The Guardian from her parents’ apartment in Wuhan. “The situation is not good. Everyday there is more bad news.’’

It all hits too hard for Gisborne, who can only wait.

“It’s scary. This is my family. These are the two people in the world that I love the most and I have to protect them; I have to get them safe and, right now, they are not safe.’’

Daniela is staying with her daughter and her parents and their dog in an apartment that measures about 1,000 square feet. Dominica has passed the time playing with her jump rope and a rollout piano keyboard, as well as taking Grade 2 mandarin classes online since the schools are all closed.

“They haven’t left the apartment for over a week now.’’

Gisborne said they are fine when it comes to food for now since Daniela’s father stocked up before the Chinese new year celebratio­ns, designed to feed all the friends and family that would be coming to visit — and never did. He said everyone is communicat­ing via laptops.

“When the world hands you lemons, you’re to make lemonade out of them, right,’’ Daniela says, trying to think positive.

Still, one thing occupies her mind. Getting out of Wuhan with her daughter and getting back to Gisborne.

“I’m worried,’’ she said. “I want to go back to Canada with my family. The good news is we’re being told the number of cases is at its maximum right now, so I’m holding out hope, (but) I don’t know when we’re coming home.’’

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Monte Gisborne of Montague is pictured with his wife and step-daughter on vacation in 2018. At the moment, his wife, Daniela, and step-daughter, Dominica, are healthy but trapped in Wuhan where the coronaviru­s has killed nearly 500 people and infected more than 24,000 others.
SUBMITTED Monte Gisborne of Montague is pictured with his wife and step-daughter on vacation in 2018. At the moment, his wife, Daniela, and step-daughter, Dominica, are healthy but trapped in Wuhan where the coronaviru­s has killed nearly 500 people and infected more than 24,000 others.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada