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Pulmonologist Branimir Nestorov said there was no point in introducing a longer police station for the May 1 holiday, but that there would be a “disaster” on the streets tomorrow.
Source: B92
Photo: Printskrin / TV B92
Nestor was a guest on Focus on B92, saying the virus was weakening and that, according to “his model,” there would be no unforeseen effects on the coronavirus.
“We cannot close the state now because of a small percentage of those who can become infected,” he concluded.
According to him, the weather is bad today, so there was no possibility of larger meetings for May 1.
He claimed that he was only picking up a curfew today from 6pm to 5am, but noted that people had already rushed out of Belgrade, and that 20,000 cars had passed through the toll booth.
Nestori said there was no longer any purpose for stiffer measures and movement bans.
“It is clear to me that people have been bored,” he said, adding that people no longer look at the stump, take off their mask and relax, that is not good.
“At the end of May everything will be over and that’s it, it would be a great surprise if the network happens in June,” Nestorov concluded.
He added that 40 more people would die at the end of the epidemic in Serbia.
“The president is pessimistic and always takes the worst case scenario. When you are a janitor, you think differently, I am more optimistic,” Nestorov said.
As he said, a police curfew is necessary for retirees to walk.
“We put a lot of effort into protecting that group of people. I understand that people are impatient, it is a little selfish, that I can go to have coffee at 8, retirees at 3 in the morning,” he said.
Nestori said it was realistic to end the state of health by the end of next week.
“The virus is in the fight, it will weaken a lot. There is no more purpose to act as we did at the beginning of the epidemic,” he warned.
Nestorov said the virus now circulating in Serbia is much weaker, but that a mask should be used in transport.
“It has to come to life, microphone for microphone, a little bit of disinfection, a little bit of fear … People are also there during the war and the bombings or at work,” Nestorov said.
Nestori said that based on epigenetics, the science of how ancestral genes affect offspring, concluded that it was our hungry ancestors that made us resistant to some diseases.
“My grandfather was starving and beating Albania, and that made me resistant to some diseases today,” Nestorov said.
According to him, he is in favor of legalizing cannabis for medical purposes because, as he said, “people are already acquiring it” illegally.
“It is more applicable to neurological diseases and conditions,” Nestorov said, adding that he was against the use of cannabis as a “recreational drug” because it aggravates the lungs.
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