Officials in the eastern Ukrainian city of Dnipro have divided public opinion by preparing more than 600 graves for coronavirus victims ahead of anticipated deaths.
The Dnipro mayor's spokeswoman Yulia Vitvitska told AFP the city had dug 615 graves and readied 2,000 body bags in preparation for COVID-19 fatalities.
At least 100 new plots could be seen in a large field surrounded by forest at a cemetery lined with orthodox crosses outside the city.
Ukraine has confirmed 1,462 coronavirus cases and 45 deaths, according to official statistics.
Dnipro has reported 13 infections and no deaths.
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"We are preparing for the worst," mayor Borys Filatov said on his Facebook page last week.
Filatov said medical workers will be prohibited from carrying out autopsies on those believed to have died from the virus.
Instead, patients who die will be placed in sealable body bags and buried in closed coffins after being disinfected, he said.
Ivan Krasikov, a local activist, said the mayor's comments had stirred anxiety among residents.
"It all intensifies the panic," he told AFP.
But Yan Valetov, a 56-year-old writer from Dnipro, said the mayor "made the right psychological move", one which will encourage residents to be more cautious.
Filatov responded to criticism in another Facebook post, saying: "This is not panic, but logistics." "God forbid" we will need the graves and body bags, he wrote.
The ex-Soviet country of 40 million people has 3,900 ventilators, a number the health ministry has said is not enough for the intensive care beds in its infectious disease hospitals.
Officials estimate that between seven and 22 million Ukrainians will be infected with COVID-19.
Ukraine's economy has been hit hard by its conflict with Russian-backed separatists in the east and is reliant on international aid.
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