Seems people are unhappy with how they were treated during lockdown
There are MASSIVE protests developing right now on the Jiujiang Yangtze River Bridge that joins the Hubei and Jiangxi provinces in Eastern China.
The situation is rapidly evolving.
THREAD 👇 pic.twitter.com/4J2LCdssDd
— Things China Doesn't Want You To Know (@TruthAbtChina) March 27, 2020
Video: A Hospital In China Refuses To Admit Coronavirus Patient As They Want To Keep Zero New Case Record – Upset Family Starts A Fight With Staff
On Tuesday (March 24) China ended its lockdown of most of Hubei province. But Wuhan, the city in Hubei province where the coronavirus outbreak first began at the end of last year, will remain under lockdown until April 8, they said.
After two months of intense lockdowns and thousands of deaths, Hubei province reported zero local cases of COVID-19 for five days in a row starting on March 19, according to CNN. On Tuesday, Hubei province reported one new case: a doctor in Wuhan’s Hubei General Hospital.
However, locals are painting a different picture that suggests that China is not being completely honest about its COVID-19 numbers.
If a recently shared video by Jennifer Zeng on Twitter is any indication, the number of casualties in China due to the novel coronavirus pandemic may be way higher than the official figure that the Chinese government has released. Zeng apparently released a video of an infected patient who was denied treatment at an unidentified hospital in China as authorities wanted to maintain their “zero new cases” record.
“Hospital refuses to admit #CCPVirus patient as they want to keep “zero new case” record,” she captioned the video. “Upset family starts a fight with staff, on March 23, Not sure which hospital.”
Video below:
Hospital refuses to admit #CCPVirus patient as they want to keep "zero new case" record. Upset family starts a fight with staff, on Mar. 23, Not sure which hospital.
Click here for more : t.co/fSwmxEsPYp#COVID2019 #Coronavirus #CoronavirusOutbreak #CoronavirusPandemic pic.twitter.com/uUGQTEgEgt— Jennifer Zeng 曾錚 (@jenniferatntd) March 23, 2020
AC