Seems the Chicoms are lying their asses off about how bad this thing really is.
The Chinese Communist Party alerted the world to the discovery of a new type of coronavirus on January 20, over a month after locals became aware of a disease spreading and 20 days after local officials shut down a wild meat market in Wuhan where the virus is believed to have originated.
According to the
Epoch Times,
the crematoria were handling “4-5 times the usual cremation volume” per day. Few of those cremated were officially confirmed as coronavirus cases.
“I received
127 corpses yesterday [February 3], and burned 116. Among them,
8 were confirmed [coronavirus cases] on the death certificate and 48 were suspected,” a funeral home director in Hubei using the pseudonym “You Hu” told the newspaper. “I am about to collapse, we are under great pressure now.”
The newspaper offered insight into a larger funeral home in Hankou, a Wuhan neighborhood, which it estimated
had the capacity to burn 576 people per day. “You Hu” told the
Epoch Times that
the backlog of people waiting to be cremated was not due to lack of space in the burners, but lack of sufficient transportation and collapsing staff numbers, as few were sleeping or taking breaks. Due to transportation and staff limits, the
Epoch Times estimated that the
Hankou crematorium was burning 225 corpses a day.
With this math, the newspaper concludes that
Hubei province incinerated 341 bodies on February 3; China reported 65 deaths nationwide due to coronavirus that day.
The article went on to state that
Hubei province has eight municipal funeral homes. Similarly judging from their capacity for bodies and the amount of time the furnaces are running, the article
adds another 135 patients a day to the tally from five of these. The other three, it concludes,
burned 476 people a day. While less confident in these numbers since the journalists were unable to speak to their managers, these numbers reveal a
rough estimate of nearly 1,000 people incinerated per day.
Of course, the article notes that there is no guarantee that all these people died after becoming infected with the novel coronavirus. It notes that, of the 127 remains “You Hu” received on February 3 (116 were cremated that day), eight were confirmed coronavirus patients and 48 were suspected carriers. The newspaper also identified another funeral home that took in 22 sets of remains and three were confirmed coronavirus cases.
These numbers, the report argues, do not align with the Communist Party policies issued on handling coronavirus remains.
“As per from the current policy of the Communist Party of China …
the funeral home must give priority to the burning of novel coronavirus patients’ bodies; other bodies may not be burned on the same day due to funeral culture, rituals, and other reasons,” the article notes.
“Based on this, it can be inferred that the 116 dead [at “You Hu”‘s crematorium] basically all died of novel coronavirus pneumonia, or at least suspected of having died of it.”