COVID-shaming pits neighbour against neighbour in locked-down Shanghai
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[April 18, 2022]
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - The tensions of
lockdown have exposed divisions among Shanghai residents, pitting young
against old, locals against outsiders, and above all, COVID-negative
against COVID-positive people.
Shanghai's 25 million people, most of whom live in apartment blocks,
have forged new communal bonds during the city's coronavirus outbreak,
through barter and group buying and setting up food-sharing stations.
But with no end in sight to a lockdown that for some has lasted four
weeks, frustrations are also mounting behind the shuttered gates of the
city's tower blocks, often playing out within WeChat message groups.
In one, conflict erupted when a woman who had been taken to centralised
quarantine - where she tested negative - accused her neighbour of
reporting her to authorities.
It is not unusual for test results to be shared and positive cases
announced in building WeChat groups, as authorities try to get to grips
with China's largest outbreak since the virus was first identified in
Wuhan in late 2019.
One U.S. citizen was told she would be sent to a quarantine centre after
results from a mixed test, including hers, came back positive last week,
sparking panic. Three others whose samples were in the batch were taken
to quarantine, but her own at-home tests continued to be negative.
"In the group chats, they were saying things like, 'oh are the positive
people still here, are the positive people still here?'," she said,
declining to give her name.
Older residents, more vulnerable to COVID-19, have also been more likely
to call for the immediate expulsion of positive cases from their
compound.
"Because of the media's exaggeration about the disease, and since old
people have weaker immune systems, they are more afraid of the virus
than young people," said one resident who had seen this happen.
Another foreign resident, who only wanted to be identified as Alexy, was
suspected by neighbours of being COVID-positive when his test result
failed to upload to his health app.
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Workers in protective suits work at a residential area under
lockdown amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in
Shanghai, China April 17, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song
His building's management tried to
block his family's food deliveries unless they shared home test
results with the rest of the residents - a demand that several
Shanghai residents have said is widespread and violates privacy.
"They have no guidelines and CDC (Center for Disease Control)
services are overwhelmed," he said. "They felt invested with the
most important mission of their life, being able to play doctor,
policeman and judge at the same time."
LOCKED-OUT
Some people were refused entry into their homes and ordered to stay
in hotels after release from central quarantine, violating state
guidelines.
Another foreign resident who tested positive said she was confined
in her apartment rather than sent to central quarantine, much to the
chagrin of her neighbours, who asked her to leave, tried to exclude
her from group grocery orders and even demanded she make a formal
apology.
One neighbour called her "foreign trash" while another spread lies
about her mental health, and the residential committee was no help,
she said.
"I saw screenshots of them telling the residents to continue calling
to get me out," she said, adding that she would move out as soon as
she could.
(Reporting by David Stanway, Josh Horwitz, Andrew Galbraith, Engen
Tham and the Shanghai newsroom; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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