Beijing's medical workers joined the tomb-sweeping crowd on
Wednesday to honor nine of their colleagues who died while fighting
the SARS epidemic in 2003.
In the city's first public memorial of its SARS heroes,
representatives from more than 20 Beijing hospitals paid tribute to
an altar erected in their names at the Party school of Beijing
Health Bureau, on the northwestern outskirts of the capital
city.
The altar inscribed with the names of the nine heroes was set up
there last June to honor the dead and inspire their colleagues.
The nine heroes -- doctors and nurses from nine hospitals --
died in the spring of 2003 after they contracted the severe acute
respiratory syndrome, or SARS, while trying to save their
patients.
SARS first broke out in the southern Guangdong Province in
November 2002 and spread to 24 provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities on the Chinese mainland.
The outbreak caused alarm around the world, with cases reported
in 32 nations and regions. The disease claimed more than 700 lives
worldwide, including at least 349 on the Chinese mainland.
(Xinhua News Agency April 5, 2007)
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