As Shanghai expands COVID lockdown, life on hold in city of 26 million
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[April 01, 2022]
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -China's
commercial hub of Shanghai ground to halt on Friday after the government
locked down most of the city's 26 million residents to stop the spread
of COVID-19, even as official numbers put local cases falling for the
second day in a row.
The city government late on Thursday extended an existing lockdown in
eastern districts, just as western parts of the city were shut down as
scheduled.
Fresh official guidance indicated that many in China's most populous
city will now be required to stay home as long as it takes to control
the outbreak - instructed not to cross their doorsteps even to dispose
of rubbish or walk their dogs.
Public transport in most of the city has been suspended, while
businesses considered non-essential, like restaurants and shopping
malls, have also had to close.
The lockdown, designed to stop an outbreak of the highly transmissible
Omicron variant that started about a month ago, began on Monday and was
originally due to last 10 days in total. Areas east of Shanghai's
Huangpu River were to be closed for five days, before reopening as
western districts began a five-day shutdown.
But the city government said it would lift the curbs in east Shanghai in
stages instead.
This means the majority of districts are now under a lockdown that
covers the office towers of the Lujiazui district, China's answer to
Wall Street, and factories including Volkswagen's joint venture with
SAIC Motor and U.S. automaker Tesla's plant.
China's outbreak is small by global standards. But Shanghai, now
accounting for three out of every four local asymptomatic cases across
the country, has emerged as a test bed for the national government's
handling of COVID - a "dynamic clearance" approach which aims to test
for, trace and centrally quarantine all positive case.
Authorities said on Friday the city's daily tally of infections eased
for the second day in the row: it reported 4,144 locally transmitted new
asymptomatic cases and 358 symptomatic cases for Thursday, versus
corresponding figures of 5,298 and 355 the previous day.
Some residents however, have expressed scepticism about the daily tally,
questioning how quickly positive cases are registered in the system.
Shanghai publishes a daily list of addresses of where cases have been
found, and some said their housing compounds were only included days
after neighbours had tested positive - or not included at all.
Shanghai city authorities didn't immediately respond to a request for
comment on the scepticism over case numbers.
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A police officer in a protective suit keeps watch on a street, as
the second stage of a two-stage lockdown to curb the spread of the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) begins in Shanghai, China April 1,
2022. REUTERS/Aly Song
CONTAGION RISKS
While in lockdown, residents will be required to undergo rounds of
nucleic acid testing carried out by healthcare workers in hazmat
suits. They're only authorised to leave their apartments for the
tests, to be carried out in or near their housing compounds, and
authorities have asked residents to line up for testing two metres
apart.
Ning Guang, president of Ruijin Hospital, told an online news
conference on Friday that residents should be aware of contagion
risks.
"If you have to take the elevator ... it would be best if you could
take it alone. But if you can't it would be best if everyone inside
can face the wall in order to lower the risk of contagion," he said.
He also urged residents to practice good hygiene to stay healthy
while in lockdown, such as by brushing their teeth more than three
times a day if possible.
Meanwhile, the Shanghai New International Expo Center, which
typically hosts trade shows like the Shanghai Autoshow, has been
converted into the city's largest central quarantine centre with
more than 15,000 beds, Xinhua news agency reported on Thursday.
On Friday, the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai said a
survey it conducted with 167 of its member companies found that 54%
of respondents have reduced their annual revenue projections due to
the outbreak.
Eric Zheng, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in
Shanghai, said that the such arrangements were acceptable for a few
days but "not sustainable" long term.
"Even if your employees are within the factory bubble, your trucks
have to come and go sending inputs and outputs, but that's not
possible," he said. "I hope this is only a temporary, drastic
measure to stop the spread."
Shanghai has said that it will keep its airports open but many
flights have been cancelled.
On Friday, only one flight was available at the domestic-focused
Shanghai Hongqiao Airport, which took off from Shanghai at around 11
a.m. to the capital city of Beijing, according to aviation data
provider Variflight.
(Reporting by Brenda Goh, Josh Horwitz, Samuel Shen and Stella Qiu;
Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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