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Tired of the epidemic and panic Indian forensic professor kills his wife and children after depression: the new crown will kill everyone

author:Nine News

According to foreign media reports, a forensic professor in the southern city of Kanpur in the southern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh brutally murdered his wife and two underage children, and the motive for the killing was allegedly out of fear of the newly discovered new coronavirus mutant strain, Aomi Kerong.

Tired of the epidemic and panic Indian forensic professor kills his wife and children after depression: the new crown will kill everyone

The forensic professor, Sushil Singh, a professor at a private local medical school, is 55 years old. Susir Singh fled his home after brutally killing his wife and children, but texted his brother Sunil Singh to inform him of the incident.

In the text message he wrote: "Sunil, please inform the police that I killed Chandraprabha, Shikhar and Khushi (i.e. wife and two children). ”

Meanwhile, Susir Singh told his brother that he was depressed.

After receiving the text message, his brother Sunil Singh immediately notified the police. Subsequently, the police rushed to Susir Singh's residence and found the bodies of Susir Singh's wife and two children, but Susir Singh was missing.

However, according to a 10-page suicide note found at the scene, Susir Singh's brutal killing was most likely due to weariness with the new crown epidemic and fear of the Aumilon variant.

In his suicide note, he wrote: "I am tired of the constant increase in the number of deaths from the new crown, now no one can be spared from the Omilon variant, it will kill everyone, all I can do is liberate everyone who is struggling with the epidemic." ”

It is reported that Susir Singh is still at large, and more details need to be further updated.

In fact, health care workers like Susir Singer, who are on the front lines of the fight against the new crown virus, have always been one of the most stressed groups. They deal with both clinical and non-clinical stressors, including: shortages of personal protective equipment, mortality and morbidity associated with COVID-19, fear of bringing the virus to their families, and the reality of losing colleagues due to illness... Evidence suggests that COVID-19 has had a significant short- and long-term impact on the mental health of healthcare workers.

After the mutated new coronavirus Olmikron strain was listed by the World Health Organization as a "needing attention" mutation on the 26th of last month, it spread in many countries in less than two weeks.

Maria VanKelkhof, who is the technical head of the new crown virus at WHO, recently said that the "traces" of the Olmikron strain have spread across 6 regions of the world divided by the organization, and a total of 38 countries and regions have reported cases of infection with the strain.

So far, India has reported two cases of the Aomi Kerong variant. The country now mandates that travelers from "at-risk" countries undergo a nucleic acid test upon arrival.

"If they find COVID-19 positive, they will be treated according to a clinical management protocol. If the test results are negative, they will be quarantined at home for 7 days," said Lav Agarwal, joint secretary of the Indian Ministry of Health.

On December 7, Michael Ryan, executive director of the World Health Organization's Emergency Program, said there was no indication that the Aumechjong strain would cause more severe disease than the Delta strain. He also said existing vaccines should protect people infected with Ami kerong from the worst-case scenario.

Wuhan Morning Post intern reporter Zhang Jiao

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