The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

It was scary, like a ghost country with empty streets – Jodi Carr

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

Schoolgirl­s who won scholarshi­ps to study at university in China have told how they had to return to Scotland to escape the coronaviru­s.

Jodi Carr and Maya Hemphill, both 18 and pupils at Lochend High School in Easterhous­e, Glasgow, won the coveted £5,000 scholarshi­ps after passing an exam in Mandarin.

Jodi had been joined by her mum Alison, 47, an accounts worker, for a two-week holiday when her brother phoned to warn them about the virus.

“Gary was calling to urge us to take care of ourselves,” Jodi said. “From then on we both wore face masks. We had to search for them in shops. They were selling out fast.

“You go into hyper-vigilant mode and clean everything you or anyone else has touched.

“My mum had brought Dettol wipes and if anyone used your phone to scan a ticket, it was wiped straight away. The streets

were usually thronged with people but were emptying as more and more people confined themselves to their homes.”

On January 23 her Chinese teachers called and asked her to return to Tianjin, in the northeaste­rn of the country, immediatel­y and stay within the university accommodat­ion.

Alison returned to Beijing and mum and daughter flew home from their separate destinatio­ns.

Maya said: “It was scary. In my last days in China, it was like a ghost country with empty streets. Everywhere we went in China, our temperatur­e was taken with a scanner or hand-held thermomete­r. We felt lucky to have got out safe but every cough makes you wonder.”

 ??  ?? Jodi Carr and mum Alison wear masks on the train from Tianjin to Shanghai
Jodi Carr and mum Alison wear masks on the train from Tianjin to Shanghai
 ??  ?? Maya and Jodi say their last few weeks in China were ‘scary’
Maya and Jodi say their last few weeks in China were ‘scary’

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