Deccan Chronicle

China to probe whistleblo­wer’s death

Wuhan doc Wenliang was first to raise alarm about novel coronaviru­s in early Jan.

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Beijing, Feb. 7: China’s anti-graft watchdog on Friday launched a probe into the death of a whistle blower doctor who was reprimande­d by police for spreading “rumours” about the coronaviru­s outbreak in China that has claimed over 630 lives, amid an outpouring of global grief and anger over his demise.

China’s ruling Communist Party has sent a highlevel investigat­ion team to the epidemic-hit Wuhan city in Central Hubei province to probe Li Wenliang’s death on Thursday.

Li, 34, was among eight Wuhan residents who were reprimande­d by local police in early January for spreading “rumours” about the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s in the province. The doctor died due to the very virus he desperatel­y tried to highlight in December last year through social media and has become a national icon with millions of netizens expressing their grief and anger over the way he was treated.

His death is widely reported by the state-run media which had earlier shunned him. A special team will head to Wuhan to investigat­e issues regarding Li, state-run People’s Daily quoted China’s top anti-corruption agency as saying on Friday.

The action has been approved by the central government and the team will have a comprehens­ive investigat­ion into matters related to the deceased doctor, China’s National Supervisor­y Commission said in a statement.

Li’s death has been mourned by the National Health Commission.

The police reaction in stifling his warning of coronaviru­s which now has become a national and internatio­nal disaster has evoked public resentment.

As of Thursday, 636 people have died due to the virus outbreak with the total number of confirmed cases jumping to 3,143, Chinese officials announced on Friday.

“After emergency treatment, Wenliang passed away. We deeply regret and mourn Li’s death,” the Central Hospital of Wuhan announced on Thursday. The doctor’s death triggered an outpouring of millions of comments on China’s social media sites as well as concerns from the internatio­nal community. “We are deeply saddened by the passing of Dr Li Wenliang. We all need to celebrate work that he did on 2019nCoV,” the WHO tweeted.

According to his post on Weibo on December 30, Li, an ophthalmol­ogist at the Central Hospital of Wuhan, warned in the online chat group WeChat that he had seen a report that showed positive test results of SARS for seven patients.

JAPAN ON FRIDAY reported 41 new cases of the virus on the cruise ship Diamond Princess that’s been quarantine­d in Yokohama harbour.

BRITAIN, GERMANY and Italy have announced more cases of the new virus from China, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in Europe to 31.

 ?? —AP ?? A couple wearing face masks exchanges their rings in a mass wedding ceremony at the Cheong Gapyeong: Shim Peace World Centre in Gapyeong, South Korea, on Friday. South Korean and foreign couples exchanged or reaffirmed marriage vows in the Unificatio­n Church’s mass wedding arranged by Hak Ja Han Moon, wife of the late Rev. Sun Myung Moon, the controvers­ial founder of the church.
—AP A couple wearing face masks exchanges their rings in a mass wedding ceremony at the Cheong Gapyeong: Shim Peace World Centre in Gapyeong, South Korea, on Friday. South Korean and foreign couples exchanged or reaffirmed marriage vows in the Unificatio­n Church’s mass wedding arranged by Hak Ja Han Moon, wife of the late Rev. Sun Myung Moon, the controvers­ial founder of the church.
 ??  ?? Li Wenliang
Li Wenliang

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