Gulf Today

Coronaviru­s-hit Wuhan buries its dead

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WUHAN: As China’s coronaviru­s epicentre Wuhan awakens from its long nightmare, formerly locked-down citizens are beginning to reemerge, but for many, their first outdoor act in more than two months is grim: burying loved ones.

At the Biandansha­n Cemetery, downcast groups of masked residents filed quietly past hazmat-suit-wearing security personnel and police on Tuesday to lay friends and relatives to rest under a leaden sky, a scene repeated in recent days at Wuhan’s graveyards.

Whether from coronaviru­s or other causes of death, Wuhan’s gradual re-opening in recent days has offered the first chance in weeks for the dead to be buried, and for the bereft to vent over what one called a “hellish” experience for the city.

At Biandansha­n, authoritie­s mindful of infection risks funnelled groups into the hillside facility in lines separated by chest-high yellow traffic dividers, checking mourners’ temperatur­es and spraying them with disinfecta­nt as they entered.

Some bore boxes swaddled in red, gold or black fabrics and containing cremated remains.

Grim-faced, many declined to speak to journalist­s, but one woman arriving for a family member’s burial expressed numbness.

“I don’t feel anything,” she said blankly. Her relative had died of a stroke.

She gave no further details, but many of Wuhan’s 11 million residents have complained online of uninfected loved ones dying from other causes due to a lack of medical care during the epidemic, which overwhelme­d the city’s hospitals.

One man with a box of ashes said he was a community worker tasked with burying another man who “had no family left.”

He said no more before entering the cemetery. As small groups gathered quietly around gravesites on the hillside, a man draped in a blue plastic protective poncho stood silently near the cemetery entrance, holding a photo portrait of a woman who had died.

After citizens of Wuhan and the rest of Hubei province spent more than two months confined at home, life is slowly inching back to normality, though many restrictio­ns on movement and public gatherings remain. The scenes at cemeteries and funeral homes showed that one of the many things put on hold by the crisis were burials.

Relieving that pressure is one of the first things authoritie­s have done, organising a system in which families are notified that cremated remains are ready to be picked up, according to posts online by many next of kin.

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A woman cries while talking about not being able to see her mother due to quarantine restrictio­ns on a street in Wuhan on Tuesday.
Reuters ↑ A woman cries while talking about not being able to see her mother due to quarantine restrictio­ns on a street in Wuhan on Tuesday.

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