Chinese capital reinstates curbs as coronavirus resurfaces
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[June 15, 2020]
By Ryan Woo and Lusha Zhang
BEIJING (Reuters) - Several districts of
the Chinese capital put up security checkpoints, closed schools and
ordered people to be tested for the coronavirus on Monday after an
unexpected spike of cases linked to the biggest wholesale food market in
Asia.
After nearly two months with no new infections, Beijing officials have
reported 79 cases over the past four days, the city's biggest cluster of
infections since February.
The return of the coronavirus has shrouded Beijing, home to the
headquarters of many big corporations, in uncertainty at a time when
China is trying to shake off the economic torpor caused by the disease.
"The containment efforts have rapidly entered into a war-time mode,"
senior city government official Xu Ying told a news conference.
Xu said 7,200 neighbourhoods and nearly 100,000 epidemic-control workers
had entered the "battlefield".
The outbreak has been traced to the sprawling Xinfadi market where
thousands of tonnes of vegetables, fruits and meat change hands each
day.
A complex of warehouses and trading halls spanning an area the size of
nearly 160 soccer pitches, Xinfadi is more than 20 times larger than the
seafood market in the city of Wuhan where the outbreak was first
identified.
The new cases have led to officials in many parts of Beijing reimposing
tough measures to stifle the spread of the virus, including
round-the-clock security checkpoints, closing schools and sports venues
and reinstating temperature checks at malls, supermarkets and offices.
Beijing residents were also advised to avoid crowds and gathering in
groups for meals.
Some districts even sent officials to residential compounds in what they
described as a "knock, knock" operation to identify people who had
visited Xinfadi or been in contact with people who had.
None of Beijing's 16 districts has been hit by a blanket lockdown.
But access to the neighbourhoods of the people who were infected have
been blocked as nucleic acid tests are being administered to residents.
The 11 neighbourhoods around Xinfadi and 10 others near another market
have also been sealed as 90,000 residents undergo tests.
Beijing began mass testing on Sunday.
FROM EUROPE?
The World Health Organization said on Sunday it was informed of the
outbreak and an investigation by Chinese officials.
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People wear protective masks as they head to work during morning
rush hour in the Central Business District following an outbreak of
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Beijing, China, June 15, 2020.
REUTERS/Thomas Peter
"WHO understands that genetic sequences will be released as soon as
possible once further laboratory analyses are completed," it said in
a statement.
Foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian, when asked whether China had
shared data with the WHO about the cluster, told reporters he was
not aware of the specifics but China and the WHO were in close
communication.
An epidemiologist with the Beijing government said on Sunday a DNA
sequencing of the virus showed the Xinfadi outbreak could have come
from Europe.
"The pattern of mutation and transmission of the new coronavirus is
not yet fully understood, and with the epidemic still spreading
overseas, the situation in the capital is very severe," said Xu
Hejian, spokesman for the Beijing city government, told a news
conference.
Governments in other parts of China warned residents against
non-essential travel to the capital, and implemented isolation
protocols for visitors from Beijing.
Wang Xiaoyang, who works in public relations in the southern
boomtown of Shenzhen, said she got a text message from authorities
telling her to stay at home for 14 days after returning from Beijing
on Friday.
The northeastern province of Liaoning and Hebei in the north
reported a handful of cases linked to the Beijing cluster. Sichuan
in the southwest reported one suspected case.
Baoding, an industrialised city southwest of Beijing, was closely
monitoring people arriving.
"Every gate to Baoding should be strictly guarded to prevent the
contagion from spreading," state media quoted officials as saying.
(Reporting by Ryan Woo, Huizhong Wu, Roxanne Liu, Liangping Gao, Se
Young Lee and Lusha Zhang in Beijing; Emily Chow in Shanghai; David
Kirton in Shenzhen; and Stephanie Ulmer-Nebehay in Geneva; Editing
by Jane Wardell, Robert Birsel, Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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