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Mayor Bill de Blasio on Monday blasted claims that the city could temporarily bury coronavirus victims in New York City parks as “totally false.”

“There will never, ever be anything like quote on quote mass graves or mass interment in New York City — ever,” the mayor said on NY1.

“If God forbid we ever had to get to the point of a temporary burial, it would be individual by individual so that families could reclaim their loved ones when the crisis was over.”

The denial came after City Councilman Mark Levine, earlier on Monday, raised the dire possibility that parks would be used for burials if the city’s morgues became overwhelmed by the number of dead.

He then said this was only a “contingency” and wouldn’t happen should the Big Apple’s death rate continue to drop.

Levine, the chair of the Council’s Health Committee, walked the comments back even further in a later tweet, saying he’d received “unequivocal assurance” from other city officials that parks would never be used as makeshift cemetaries.

Should emergency burials be needed, de Blasio said that they would happen on Hart Island — which is already a burial ground — and not in parks.

“Those are the facts. There’s really no reason for anyone to talk about this issue anymore,” the mayor said.

“Hopefully we never get to any of those eventualities and we can focus all our energies on saving lives.”