#CORONAVIRUS: Leader of anti-coronavirus fight tests positive for COVID-19
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A leader of an anti-coronavirus fight in North Carolina couldn't go to two assemblies of the gathering since she tried positive for the ailment, a report said.
Audrey Whitlock couldn't participate in the dissent gathering's initial two conventions held in Raleigh since she was in quarantine in the wake of testing positive for the infection three weeks prior.
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The gathering, named ReOpenNC, was challenging Governor Roy Cooper's stay-at-home request.
'She never went out during her quarantine, so she has not been at any meeting or any of the capacities that we've done,' individual coordinator, Ashley Smith, told a neighborhood TV channel.
'I'm not answerable for others' decisions. I'm for individual freedom,' Smith clarified.
'Everybody has their own choices to make. In the event that they need to come, that is up to them. I will be there. I'm not scared of the infection. I'm progressively scared of losing my protected rights and losing my work than I am of the infection.'
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Whitlock first uncovered her coronavirus finding in a private post to the gathering's Facebook page on Sunday.
"As an asymptomatic COVID19 positive patient (quarantine closes 4/26)," Whitlock wrote in the message acquired by the Raleigh News and Observer. "Another worry I have is the treatment of COVID patients as it identifies with other transferable ailments. I have been compelled to quarantine in my home for about fourteen days," she said.
Around 1,000 individuals mobilized in downtown Raleigh last Tuesday contending the request damaged their sacred rights.
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