Father blames China’s COVID-19 for son’s death that sparked online anger

BEIJING (AP) — The father of a 3-year-old boy who died Tuesday, Nov. 1, from carbon monoxide poisoning in northwest China says strict COVID-19 policies “indirectly killed” his son over delays in receiving treatment, in a case that sparked outrage on social media.

The boy’s death is the latest incident to cause a backlash to China’s strict zero-COVID policy, with a hashtag racking up 380 million views Wednesday on the Twitter-like Weibo platform.

“Personally, I think he killed indirectly,” the boy’s father, Tuo Shilei, told Reuters by telephone from the capital of Gansu province, Lanzhou, which has been on lockdown for several months.

Around noon on Tuesday, after his wife slipped and fell after being hit by the fuel fumes in the kitchen, Tuo saw that his son, Wenxuan, was also sick. Tuo said he tried desperately to call an ambulance or police, but couldn’t get through.

After about 30 minutes, Wenxuan’s condition worsened, and Tuo said that he had performed CPR, which in summary helped. He ran with his son to the front of his network complex, under strict blockade, but the one at the door would not let him pass, telling him to call the network government or an ambulance.

Desperate and willing to wait any longer for an ambulance, Tuo burst through the doors with his son and some “kind-hearted” citizens called a taxi to take them to the hospital, where doctors’ efforts to save Wenxuan failed.

“There was the COVID scenario at the checkpoint. The staff didn’t act, then ignored and shied away from the problem, and then blocked us at another checkpoint,” said Tuo, 32, who owns a small butcher shop.

“It has not been provided. This series of occasions resulted in the death of my son.

The government and health ministry of Lanzhou and the provincial government of Gansu did not respond promptly to requests for comment. Reuters was unable to do so without delay at the hospital where the boy died.

At the ruling Communist Party Congress last month, President Xi Jinping reaffirmed China’s commitment to the zero-COVID policy that has made it an outlier and led to disruptive and draconian closures in the country’s cities.

The Lanzhou incident began making social media headlines after a video shared Tuesday showing Wenxuan receiving CPR in the back of a three-wheeler, accompanied by a comment suggesting he died due to delays in his treatment.

A hashtag, “Three years of COVID his total life,” has become a hot topic before being deleted, a common and heavily censored web phenomenon in China.

“The memory of the child will be a mask and nothing more,” Weibo user Banmiaoxiaozhou wrote.

“Is there still acceptance as truth with the authorities?” wrote another user, named lawyer Zhong Guohua.

Many cases of others dying because they couldn’t get medical care due to COVID restrictions have sparked viral outrage this year, adding to Shanghai’s two-month lockdown.

In January, a senior Chinese official warned hospitals not to turn away patients after a woman’s miscarriage and closure in Xian sparked fury.

Tuo said he later contacted someone who said he was a retired local official and showed up for Tuo to get 100,000 yuan ($13,743) if he signed a pledge not to go public or seek redress for the incident.

Tuo said he rejected the offer, not an easy explanation for his son’s death.

On Wednesday morning, a funeral was held for Wenxuan in the family’s nearby hometown of Hezheng. Tuo was not present, for fear of being quarantined when he arrived.

$1 = 7. 2766 Chinese yuan renminbi

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