Tuesday February 04, 2025

Spain holds service to remember coronavirus victims

Published : 16 Jul 2021, 02:02

  DF News Desk
Soldiers present flowers to a memorial torch during the remembrance service at the Royal Palace in Madrid, Spain, July 15, 2021. Photo: Xinhua.

Spain held a remembrance service here at the Royal Palace on Thursday morning for the 81,043 people who have lost their lives to the coronavirus, reported Xinhua.

The service was attended by King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia of Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and leaders of main political parties.

The family members of 102 health workers who lost their lives to COVID-19 in Spain also attended the service, where they received medals to recognize the sacrifice of their relatives during the pandemic.

The 97-year-old Anceli Hidalgo, who was the first person to be vaccinated against COVID-19 in Spain on Dec. 27, 2020, gave a message at the event. She thanked health workers, care home employees and ambulance drivers, saying their "work and effort is saving a lot of lives." She also asked the young people who have not been vaccinated to "respect the pandemic."

King Felipe VI paid tribute in his speech to health workers who "gave the best that they had."

"We have to remember all of those who are no longer with us and show our most solemn respect and admiration for the health workers, who have given everything since the start of the pandemic."

"There are no words that can truly give consolation for the loss of a loved one, but you have our respect and our deepest emotional embrace," he said, while warning the pandemic has not yet been beaten.

At the event, Maria Diaz, a health worker, expressed the hope for the future in a country where 47.4 percent of the population have received both doses of a vaccine and 60 percent have received one jab.

"The vaccine has allowed us to think about a better future. Science has won once again," she noted.

The latest data from the Ministry of Health confirmed 26,390 new cases of COVID-19 in the 24-hour period until 14:00 hours on Wednesday, with the 14-day incidence rate rising to 469.50 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, and the incidence rate at 1,508.64 per 100,000 for those aged 20-29.