A Chinese woman who lost her father to coronavirus has filed a lawsuit against the government seeking forgiveness and compensation


Wuhan woman wants to pay money to China.

Zhao Lei is suing the government for responding to a rare and public apology for the rare coronavirus epidemic that has already killed 851,141 people and infected more than 25.5 million people globally.

Among those who lost their lives was Zhao’s father.

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Zhao, 39, told Sky News that his father contracted the deadly disease in late January, but the city’s emergency services were overwhelmed by a tsunami of growing Kovid-19 cases that did not have an ambulance to take him to the hospital.

His family had to walk 6 miles in the freezing cold before locals caught him driving an auto rickshaw. But by then, the damage had been done and Zhao’s sick father had gone bad. He died of respiratory failure while sitting in the emergency waiting room.

“My father was honest,” he said. “… He was very kind. He was a very ordinary person in Wuhan. He followed all the rules.”

The shock of losing her father forced Zayn to make a bold decision to go after the government.

“I think the government hid some facts.”

Zana’s father fell ill after the city went on lockdown. Her death came as a shock to her system.

“At that point, I was stunned,” he said. “Afterwards, my heart broke, and I got very angry too.”

“Afterwards, my heart broke, and I got very angry too.”

– Zhao Lei

That anger turned into action.

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Thousands of families in Wuhan have mourned like Zhao, with very few publicly ashamed and blaming the government – largely out of fear.

Police allegedly visited his mother and warned that Zhao should drop the case and not talk about his experience in public.

The ruling Communist Party is known for its silence and detention of people who believe it speaks ill of the country or paints those who charge in any kind of negative light.

In fact, in the early days of COVID-19, Chinese authorities regularly surrounded citizens’ reporters who reported from Wuhan, some still in their custody. Many Western journalists were also expelled from the country for daring to report on the novel Coronavirus, which would eventually wreak havoc on the world.

But Zhao remains adamant and says the tricks of fear will not change his mind. He is ready to go to the Supreme Court in Wuhan’s Hubei province.

“What I did is legal, what I said is a fact.” “I didn’t lie. I didn’t make rumors.”

He also believes his claim is ultimately good for the country.

“It can warn people that we can do something to prevent bad consequences if the next disaster strikes. We can save more people.”

China is lagging behind in trying to change the global narrative about controlling its killer virus. There is an adjusted national narrative that China has conquered the coronavirus and this has been done under the leadership of President Xi Jinping.

In June, the government released an official account of its response.

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“The Communist Party of China and the Chinese government have made this epidemic a top priority and have taken swift action,” the White Paper said. “Secretary-General Xi Jinping has taken personal orders, planned a response, monitored the general situation and acted decisively, showing the way forward in the fight against the epidemic.”

Zhao is not buying it.