Funny Covid Baby Names

Check out some funny COVID baby names. Some parents have searched for their children names related to what is happening to symbolize the time the world is living.

Funny Covid Baby Names
Funny Covid Baby Names

Corona Kumar, Covid Marie, among other variants, in Asia more and more parents are giving their newborns a name that alludes to the coronavirus, visibly indifferent to the long-term consequences of their choice.

Covid Marie

When Tabesa Hill gave birth on April 13 in Bacolod, Philippines, she decided, according to the girl’s father, John Tupas, 23, that her daughter bear "a name that reminds us that we escaped covid-19 ". That is why the newborn became Covid Marie.

Corona Kumar and Corona Kumari

A few weeks earlier, two mothers in southeastern India had the same idea. It is even said that a doctor from the hospital where their babies were born blew them off. One is now called Corona Kumar and the other Corona Kumari. “I told them that it would help raise awareness (of people) about the disease and eliminate the prejudices that surround it,” confirms the doctor, SF Basha. “To my surprise, they accepted,” he adds.

Lockdown

A migrant worker couple from northeast India, stranded thousands of miles from their homes in Rajasthan state, have chosen to name their son " Lockdown ." “We call it Lockdown to remember all the problems we faced during this difficult period,”

In other developments in the Asia-Pacific region related to the coronavirus pandemic, Indian health authorities have canceled plans to administer the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine in the slums of Mumbai as a prevention method against the coronavirus. They indicated that plans to carry out tests are still underway but that this had not yet been approved by the central government.

In Bangkok, authorities in the Thai capital announced that they will soon relax some of the restrictions imposed to stop the spread of the coronavirus. The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration declared that they will be able to reopen restaurants, markets, gyms, parks, hairdressers, barbershops, clinics, nursing homes, veterinary hospitals and golf courses. In Malaysia, lawyers and an international human rights group denounced that the penalties against those who violate coronavirus quarantine measures are excessive. Violators in the country can receive sentences of up to six months in prison and large fines. Police have arrested more than 21,000 people since the lockdown was imposed on March 8.

In South Korea, authorities have urged people to continue to abide by social distancing rules as the nation begins its longest holiday since the first signs of the disease emerged in February. Vice Health Minister Kim Gang-lip estimated on Wednesday that 180,000 people will flock to the Jeju island resort for the six-day holiday that runs from Thursday to Tuesday, even though the local government has asked people not to go.