The Case of the Mysteriously Vanished Doctor Ai Fen in China

The Case of the Mysteriously Vanished Doctor Ai Fen in China

A Chinese doctor said that her bosses tried to silence her early warnings. Moreover, those warnings were concerning the coronavirus. As it appears, the doctor disappeared. According to the reports, she was detained.

At Wuhan Central Hospital, Ai had pointed out cases of the illness to colleagues. Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported that eight of those colleagues reprimanded themselves.

Ai Fen is the head of the emergency department. Nevertheless, on Monday, 60 Minutes Australia reported that her whereabouts are currently unknown.

The outlet tweeted that just two days ago, the Head of Emergency at Wuhan Central hospital went public. They said that authorities had stopped her and her colleagues from warning the world. Thus, Fen’s whereabouts are unknown, and she has disappeared.

On her page on the Chinese social media site Weibo, Fen posted a cryptic message soon after the program.

Couple with a Wuhan cityscape photo, posts read “A river. A bridge. A road. A clock chimes.”

She had posted around two weeks earlier where she shanked for the love and care. She said that she was still working, and she was okay now.

On Wednesday, she posted “Happy April Fools Day” on the site. The picture showed that she was wearing a mask and a lab coat. Thus, she was working at the hospital.

Nevertheless, the RFA reports that detainees in China that are in custody can update their social media accounts under orders of authorities, or police might have access to their devices.

Case of Ai Fen

China’s Renwu (People) magazine published in a now-deleted essay titled “The one who supplied the whistle.” Fen said that her boss’ had efforts to silence, report RFA.

China

After taking a photo of the patient’s test results and circled the definite answer for SARS coronavirus resulted in red, Fen said the reprimand came. All that information is in the article.

China was accused of attempting to cover the coronavirus outbreak before the escalated crisis.

Dr. Li Wenliang worked with Fen. He died in early February. Back on December 30, he sent out a warning over the WeChat messaging app and advised fellow med school grads to wear protective clothing. It was to avoid infection after several patients from a local seafood market were exhibiting symptoms like SARS.

Nevertheless, his attempts for the early alarm were denounced by authorities. They said it was rumormongering.

Nevertheless, the ruling Communist Party said that Wuhan’s police forcefully revoked its admonishment of the doctor. It was in a startling admission of error late last month. Moreover, admonishment included a threat of arrest.

On Wednesday, China reported more than 1,300 asymptomatic coronavirus cases. Following public concern over people who have tested positive without any illness symptoms, it was the first time it has released such data. It is according to Agence France-Presse.

Officials of the Health also reported the first case of imported COVID-19 in Wuhan. It was a Chinese national who was studying in the United Kingdom. The person arrived in the city last week to begin to lift its travel restriction.