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		Shanghai's COVID lockdown drags into 4th week, fears flicker Beijing 
		could be next
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		 [April 25, 2022] 
		By David Stanway and Yifan Wang 
 SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Shanghai's COVID-19 
		lockdown misery dragged into a fourth week, as orders on Monday for mass 
		testing in Beijing's biggest district sparked fears that the Chinese 
		capital could be destined for a similar fate.
 
 In their battle to stamp out the virus, authorities in Shanghai said 
		they would reserve the harshest restrictions for smaller areas around 
		confirmed cases, raising hopes of some respite among the millions of 
		people currently living in strictly quarantined neighbourhoods.
 
 "Every compound, every gate, every door must be strictly managed," Qi 
		Keping, vice-head of Shanghai's northeastern commercial district of 
		Yangpu, told a daily newsconference, describing the new, more targeted 
		approach, and saying it would "better achieve differentiated 
		prevention".
 
 In Beijing, all 3.45 million people living or working in Chaoyang 
		district were ordered to have three tests this week, as authorities 
		warned that the virus had crept into the city largely undetected during 
		the previous week, with a few dozen cases reported.
 
 Fearing they were about to taste the misery suffered in Shanghai, many 
		people in the capital began stockpiling food, toilet paper and other 
		basic goods.
 
		
		 
		China stocks slumped to two year lows on heightened worries of a 
		potential outbreak in Beijing.
 Blanket restrictions over large areas have fuelled frustration and anger 
		in Shanghai, a city of 25 million people.
 
 Over the weekend, authorities in China's commercial capital sealed off 
		entrances of public housing blocks and closed off entire streets with 
		two-metre-tall green wire mesh fences, with videos circulating online 
		showing residents protesting from their balconies.
 
 Police in hazmat suits have been patrolling the streets, setting up road 
		blocks and asking pedestrians to go home.
 
 While some people are allowed to leave their homes, most living under 
		lockdown in Shanghai are either confined to home or cannot leave their 
		residential compound. Even those who can go out have few place to go, 
		with shops and most other venues closed.
 
 Explaining the need for a new approach, Qi singled out the Tongji New 
		Village area in her district, saying that although all its 6,000 
		residents were under complete lockdown, only a few residential buildings 
		were reporting positive cases and curbs could be more focused on those.
 
		
		 
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			Green fences seal entrances to shops and housing units along a 
			street, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in 
			Shanghai, China April 24, 2022. REUTERS/Jacqueline Wong 
            
			 Qi spoke alongside other city 
			officials.
 One woman in Shanghai's Changning district, who declined to be 
			named, said Qi's comments gave her something to cling on to.
 
 "Though I'm still sealed up now, I'm crying with joy," she said via 
			WeChat.
 Shanghai is carrying out daily COVID tests and 
			accelerating transfers of positive cases to quarantine facilities, 
			sometimes outside the city. In the past week, authorities have 
			transferred entire communities, including uninfected people, saying 
			they need to disinfect their homes, residents said.
 Health officials said demand for ambulance and emergency services in 
			hospitals was more than 12 times higher than a year ago, putting 
			strains on the system despite a four-fold increase in manpower, 
			longer working shifts and a 50% increase in ambulances.
 
 "Although the measures have eased the supply strains to some extent, 
			there is still a big discrepancy with the actual needs of the 
			public," Zhao Dandan, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal 
			Health Commission, told the same news conference.
 
 The Shanghai government reported 51 new COVID deaths on April 24, 
			the highest daily tally so far.
 That takes the official death toll to 138, all 
			reported from April 17 onwards, although many residents have said 
			relatives or friends died after catching COVID as early as March, 
			casting doubt over the statistics. 
			
			 Local asymptomatic cases fell to 16,983 from 19,657 the day before. 
			Symptomatic infections rose to 2,472, from 1,401.
 Cases outside quarantined areas dropped to 217 from 280. Other 
			cities that have been under lockdown began easing restrictions once 
			such cases hit zero.
 
 Research by Gavekal Dragonomics published on Friday estimated that 
			out of China's top 100 cities by economic output, 57 had "relatively 
			tough" COVID restrictions in place last week, down from 66 the week 
			before.
 
 (Reporting by the Beijing and Shanghai bureaus; writing by Marius 
			Zaharia; Editing by Himani Sarkar & Simon Cameron-Moore)
 
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