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Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

Kissinger Warns of Anarchy Hitting World for Generations after Coronavirus


Thu 09 Apr 2020 | 04:14 PM
Ahmed Moamar

US former Secretary of State Dr. Henry Kissinger has warned that a state of anarchy would hit the world after the end of the pandemic of the Coronavirus.

He stressed that the envisioned catastrophe includes devastation of the world economy and chaos in most parts of the world.

He added that the expected disasters would hold for generations.

Kissinger went on to say that the catastrophe linked with the deadly virus has no precedent throughout the human history.

The destructive effects of the coming disaster have no limits.

The world-wide famous diplomat, who turns 96 years by 2020, considers that welfare and prosperity on the nations could be attained only be deepening trust between governments and peoples across the world.

He advised authorities to predict the problems looming and surmounting them ahead of regaining stability.

The former US Secretary of State affirmed that after the end of the Coronavirus in the planet, governments and institutions would be accountable for any shortages in handling the disaster of the deadly virus.

The World Health Organization (WHO) on March 10 renamed the disease as COVID-19.

He concluded that the world must fight the virus and then work to establish a new world system to prevail after the age of the Coronavirus.

Kissinger served as a Secretary of State under US Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.

According to the WHO, more than one and a half million have contracted the Coronavirus.

On the other hand, the U.S. became the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic after more new cases surpassed those officially reported by China since the outbreak of the disease last December.

It is worth mentioning that when the novel Coronavirus was first detected in the U.S. on Jan. 20, it affected more than 400,000 people in the U.S., across all 50 states.

Of the reported cases in the U.S., nearly 13,000 people have died because of the virus, with about 5,500 of those deaths in New York, more than 1,200 in New Jersey, 845 in Michigan, 582 in Louisiana and 450 related deaths reported in California.

Worldwide, nearly 1.5 million cases have been reported and 83,424 related deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins virus dashboard.