Amid Pandemic, Ecuador Removes 100 Corpses From Homes in Its Biggest City

Reuters
By Reuters
March 28, 2020Americas
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Amid Pandemic, Ecuador Removes 100 Corpses From Homes in Its Biggest City
A driver wearing a face mask shows documents to the police (out of frame) during an operation in the framework of the state of emergency decreed due to coronavirus, in northern Quito, on March 19, 2020. (Rodrigo Buendia/AFP/Getty Images)

Ecuadorean authorities have removed 100 corpses from homes in the city of Guayaquil in three days, the interior minister said on Friday, following residents’ complaints that they have no way to dispose of relatives’ remains amid the CCP virus pandemic, also known as the novel coronavirus pandemic.

The coastal city has the country’s largest concentration of COVID-19 cases as well as a heavy presence of military officers enforcing curfew prompted by a nationwide health emergency declaration.

Interior Minister Maria Paula Romo said on Friday that the curfew had restricted funeral homes’ operating hours and left some family members with no choice but to keep deceased relatives in their homes.

“Some of these deaths are related to the coronavirus and others were not,” she said in an interview with online broadcaster MaxTv.

NTD Photo
Ecuadorean Interior Minister Maria Paula Romo (C) speaks during a press conference to report on the 10-day crisis in Quito, on Oct. 15, 2019. (Photo by Luis Robayo/AFP via Getty Images)

Ecuador as of Friday had reported 1,627 infections and 41 deaths from the CCP virus. More than 70% of the cases are in the province of Guayas, where Guayaquil is located.

NTD refers to the novel coronavirus, which causes the COVID-19 disease, as the CCP virus because the Chinese Communist Party’s coverup and mismanagement allowed the virus to spread throughout China before it was transmitted worldwide.

Romo acknowledged most of those who had died in their homes had not been tested for the virus, and therefore would not appear in the official tally of deaths.

On social media and in interviews with local media, Guayaquil residents have complained of delays of more than 24 hours to remove the remains of relatives, which they said was creating the risk of the disease spreading further.

One such case was that of Bolivar Reyes, 43, a juice merchant, who died after suffering symptoms consistent with COVID-19 but was never tested, his wife Rosa Romero said in a telephone interview.

His remains stayed inside her home in a poor area of northern Guayaquil for more than a day because crews tasked with removing bodies were unable to keep up, she said.

“They told me to be patient, that they hadn’t been able to arrive because they only had a single vehicle that needed to go to a number of places,” said Romero.

“The neighbors told me that if I didn’t get rid of (the remains), they were going to burn down my house.”

By Alexandra Valencia and Yuri Garcia

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