The Idaho House and Senate voted to censure the Chinese (CCP) government for concealing the Wuhan pneumonia outbreak, harming the Uighur people in Xinjiang, and disregarding international responsibilities and human rights violations, and called on Washington to sanction China (CCP).
The Idaho condemnation, filed on February 16 and adopted on April 7, is a memorandum accusing the Chinese government and the Communist Party of China of concealment in the early stages of the 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID-19, the Wuhan pneumonia “Chinese Communist virus”) outbreak.
The memo notes that “the Chinese (CCP) government is dictatorial and its misconduct has caused an epidemic that has killed millions of people in history; and that the CCP is committing genocide against the Uighurs in Xinjiang in western China.”
The memo, which will be forwarded to President Biden and the presidents of the House and Senate, expresses Idaho’s position that “the Chinese Communist Party is hostile and the Chinese (CCP) government should be sanctioned for its misconduct.
The Idaho Legislature found that China (CCP) had failed in several ways to conceal the outbreak, other than requiring whistleblowers to keep quiet, denying that the outbreak was human-to-human in the face of sufficient evidence, and doing little to stop the spread of the outbreak. China (CCP) has covered up the epidemic while stockpiling high quality personal protective equipment (PPE) and exporting faulty PPE around the world, endangering the lives of healthcare and first responders in other countries. These actions by the Chinese Communist Party have caused irreparable damage to countries and people around the world.
To date, more than 180,000 people have been infected and nearly 2,000 have died in Idaho, and many have been unable to see their loved ones for the last time during the epidemic; small businesses have closed and working communities have struggled to make ends meet.
According to the latest statistics from Johns Hopkins University, 31 million cases have been diagnosed in the U.S., and about 560,000 people have died.
Recent Comments