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		'Shanghai was a lesson': Beijing residents hit the stores amid COVID 
		lockdown fears
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		 [April 25, 2022] 
		By Ryan Woo and David Stanway 
 BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -A mass COVID-19 
		testing order in Beijing's biggest district prompted residents in the 
		Chinese capital to stock up on groceries, fearing they could be destined 
		for a lockdown similar to that of Shanghai, which entered a fourth week 
		of bitter isolation.
 
 Authorities in Chaoyang, home to 3.45 million people, late on Sunday 
		ordered those who live and work there to be tested three times this week 
		as Beijing warned the virus had "stealthily" spread for about a week 
		before being detected.
 
 Knowing how Shanghai residents struggled to source food and other 
		essentials while locked indoors, shoppers in Beijing crowded stores and 
		online platforms to stock up on vegetables, fresh meat, instant noodles 
		and toilet paper.
 
 A 63-year-old Chaoyang resident surnamed Di bought two bags of 
		vegetables - enough for 8-10 days, he said - just in case his building 
		is added to more than a dozen put under lockdown.
 
 "Shanghai was a lesson," he said, adding that he doesn't believe Beijing 
		will suffer the same fate.
 
		
		 
		In the financial hub, the lack of enough couriers to make deliveries to 
		homes has been the main supply bottleneck, fuelling widespread anxiety 
		and anger.
 In Beijing, supermarket chains including Carrefour and Wumart said they 
		had more than doubled inventories, while Meituan's grocery-focused 
		e-commerce platform increased stocks and the number of staff for sorting 
		and delivery, state-backed Beijing Daily reported.
 
 China stocks slumped to two-year lows on worries of a potential Beijing 
		outbreak.
 
 Research by Gavekal Dragonomics published on Friday estimated that out 
		of China's top 100 cities by economic output, 57 had "relatively tough" 
		COVID-19 restrictions in place last week, down from 66 the week before.
 
 Beijing's case load is small compared with those globally and the 
		hundreds of thousands in Shanghai. Most Chaoyang schools, stores and 
		offices remained open.
 
 The district is home to many wealthy residents, most foreign embassies 
		as well as entertainment venues and corporate headquarters. It has 
		little manufacturing.
 
 'EVERY DOOR MUST BE MANAGED'
 
 In Shanghai, draconian restrictions were still enforced widely across 
		the city, but officials raised hopes of some respite by saying they 
		would look into reserving the harshest curbs for smaller areas around 
		confirmed cases.
 
 "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 news conference, describing the new, more targeted 
		approach, and saying it would "better achieve differentiated 
		prevention".
 
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			Residents line up at a makeshift nucleic acid testing site during a 
			mass testing for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) following the 
			outbreak, in Beijing, China April 25, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang 
            
			 Over the weekend, authorities sealed 
			off entrances of many public housing blocks and even entire streets 
			with two-metre-tall green wire mesh fences, with videos online 
			showing residents protesting from their balconies as frustration 
			reached new heights among the city's 25 million residents. 
 Police in hazmat suits have been patrolling the streets, setting up 
			road blocks and asking pedestrians to go home.
 
 While authorities say they have relaxed some curbs, most in Shanghai 
			are still either confined to their homes or cannot leave their 
			residential compounds. Even those who can go out have few places 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.
 
 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.
 
 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-19 as early as March, casting doubt over 
			the statistics.
 
			
			 Local asymptomatic cases fell to 16,983 from 19,657 the day before 
			in Shanghai. 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.
 
 There have been 70 locally transmitted cases in eight of Beijing's 
			16 districts since Friday, with Chaoyang accounting for 46 of them.
 
 (Reporting by the Beijing and Shanghai bureaus; Writing by Marius 
			Zaharia; Editing by Himani Sarkar, Simon Cameron-Moore and 
			Jacqueline Wong)
 
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