Coronavirus: Li Wenliang, doctor who alerted public to the outbreak, dies of the disease. https://t.co/9SNHwZVEjI
— Jim Roberts (@nycjim) February 6, 2020
The Chinese doctor who blew whistle on the Coronavirus has died: https://t.co/XxnSN6624n pic.twitter.com/xseGB6smOV
— Complex (@Complex) February 6, 2020
“We will not forgot the doctor who spoke up about an illness that was called rumor,” said one commenter. “What else can we do? The only thing is not to forget.” https://t.co/9d20wDDQkg
— Chris Buckley 储百亮 (@ChuBailiang) February 6, 2020
The death of Li Wenliang has ignited grief in China. By late Thursday, at least 618 people in Hubei had died from the the virus. But as they must go almost entirely unnamed, unmemorialized beyond their families, the role of icon falls on him alone. https://t.co/yOYMVVWPx0
— Chris Buckley 储百亮 (@ChuBailiang) February 6, 2020
“After I recover, I still want to return to the front line,” he said recently. “The epidemic is still spreading, and I don’t want to be a deserter.” https://t.co/9d20wDDQkg
— Chris Buckley 储百亮 (@ChuBailiang) February 6, 2020
Not sure what China is thinking by chemical disinfection in the streets of Wuhan, an epicenter of #coronavirus outbreak. pic.twitter.com/sFjIFbyHQg
— Ken Rutkowski (@kenradio) February 7, 2020
A Japanese flag with the words “medicine lacking” is draped on the quarantined cruise ship Diamond Princess. Some guests are elderly and on medication. #coronavirus #DiamondPrincess pic.twitter.com/iQncSy50tX
— Paula Hancocks (@PHancocksCNN) February 7, 2020
#UPDATE: Authorities in Wuhan have been ordered to round up all coronavirus infected for mass quarantine camps, as the death toll rises by 69 in one day.https://t.co/fURPDpLxX5
— news.com.au (@newscomauHQ) February 7, 2020
Drone footage shows Wuhan, a city with 11 million residents, starting to resemble a ghost town amid the coronavirus lockdown pic.twitter.com/L7XByNRn4U
— SCMP News (@SCMPNews) February 7, 2020