Brazilian gravediggers start digging up dead with 42,000 covid deaths
Brazilian gravediggers start digging up the dead to make more room in cemeteries after nation passes UK to become country with second-worst Covid-19 toll with nearly 42,000 dead
- Gravediggers in Brazil dug up the dead to make room for Covid casualties
- Brazil now has the second-worst death toll with more than 42,000 lost to illness
- Bodies of those who died three years ago are being removed from graveyard
- Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19
Workers in Sao Paulo, Brazil, have started digging up the bodies of the dead to make room for Covid-19 victims as the country’s death toll from the virus nears 42,000.
The South American nation has now overtaken the UK to hold the second-highest number of deaths in the world behind the United States.
Sao Paulo’s municipal funeral service said in a statement Friday that the remains of people who died at least three years ago will be exhumed and put in numbered bags, then stored temporarily in 12 metal storage containers it has purchased.
A worker digs up a body buried three years earlier at the Vila Formosa cemetery in Sao Paulo
Brazil has seen almost 42,000 people die of coronavirus with 5,480 casualties in Sao Paulo
The containers will be delivered to several cemeteries within 15 days, the statement said.
Sao Paulo is one of the COVID-19 hot spots in Latin America’s hardest-hit nation, with 5,480 deaths as of Thursday in the city of 12 million people.
Some health experts are worried about a new surge now that a decline in intensive care bed occupancy to about 70% prompted Mayor Bruno Covas to authorize a partial reopening of business this week.
The result has been crowded public transport, long lines at malls and widespread disregard for social distancing.
The country has suffered so many deaths that workers need to clear space to bury people
Many health experts predict the peak of Brazil’s pandemic will arrive in August, having spread from the big cities where it first appeared into the nation’s interior.
The virus has so far killed almost 42,000 Brazilians, and Brazil passed the United Kingdom on Friday to become the country with the world’s second highest death toll.
Dr. Michael Ryan, the World Health Organization’s emergencies chief, said Friday that the situation in Brazil remains ‘of concern,’ although acknowledged that intensive care bed occupancy rates are now below 80% in most areas of the country.
Brazil has the second-most coronavirus deaths in the world but the health system is coping
‘Overall the health system is still coping in Brazil, although, having said that, with the sustained number of severe cases that remains to be seen,’ Ryan said.
‘Clearly the health system in Brazil across the country needs significant support in order to sustain its effort in this regard. But the data we have at the moment supports a system under pressure, but a system still coping with the number of severe cases.’
The experts aren’t the only ones with concerns.
At Sao Paulo’s biggest cemetery, Vila Formosa, Adenilson Costa was among workers in blue protective suits digging up old graves Friday. He said their work has only grown more arduous during the pandemic, and as he removed bones from unearthed coffins, he said he fears what is to come.
‘With this opening of malls and stores we get even more worried. We are not in the curve; we are in the peak and people aren’t aware,’ Costa said. ‘This isn’t over. Now is the worrisome moment. And there are still people out.’
Gravediggers at Sao Paulo’s largest cemetery Vila Formosa buried 1,654 people in April
The exhumed remains of the dead will be stored in large metal containers to make space
In April, gravediggers at Vila Formosa buried 1,654 people, up more than 500 from the previous month. Numbers for May and June aren’t yet available.
Before the pandemic, Costa said, he and colleagues would exhume remains of about 40 coffins per day if families stopped paying required fees for the plots. In recent weeks that figure has more than doubled.
Remains stored in the metal containers will eventually be moved to a public ossuary, according to the statement from the city’s funeral office. Its superintendent, Thiago Dias da Silva, told the Globo network that containers have been used before and they are more practical and affordable than building new ossuaries.
Work has been so busy in Sao Paulo cemeteries since the outbreak began that one of Costa’s relatives was buried only a few meters (yards) from where he was working one day – without him even knowing. ‘I only found out the next day,’ he said.
Three other people he knew have also died from the virus.
‘People say nothing scares gravediggers. COVID does,’ Costa said.
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