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		China's capital sharpens COVID screening to prevent Shanghai-like chaos
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		 [April 28, 2022] 
		By Eduardo Baptista and David Stanway 
 BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Beijing closed 
		some schools and public spaces on Thursday, as most of the Chinese 
		capital's 22 million residents turned up for more mass COVID-19 testing 
		aimed at averting a Shanghai-like lockdown.
 
 Most people in Shanghai were one month into stressful home isolation, 
		struggling to meet basic needs. But there was hope on the horizon as the 
		number of new cases declined further and officials said their focus was 
		shifting towards boosting vaccinations among the elderly.
 
 Fears were growing, however, that China would be trapped in a 
		whack-a-mole game in coming months, lifting lockdowns in some places, 
		while imposing others elsewhere, causing severe economic damage and 
		exasperating its population.
 
 As Beijing rolled out three rounds of mass testing this week across most 
		of the city, it locked down a number of residential compounds, offices 
		and a university.
 
 Some schools, entertainment venues and tourist sites were also shut. 
		Universal Studios in Beijing said it would require visitors from Friday 
		to show negative test results before they could enter the theme park.
 
		
		 
		Andrew Ward, 36, a Canadian living in one of Beijing's narrow lanes of 
		courtyard houses known as hutongs, was sent to quarantine in a hotel on 
		Thursday even though his test results were negative. 
 On Wednesday, people in hazmat suits tested Ward at home after he was 
		identified as a close contact of a COVID case.
 
 "I'm a little bit annoyed, because I spent all that money and time 
		stockpiling food for being locked down at home," said Ward, who works at 
		an international school.
 
 Beijing had found 56 new locally transmitted COVID cases as of 3 p.m. 
		(0700 GMT) on Thursday since 3 p.m. a day earlier, a municipal health 
		official said.
 
 The city's overall tally in the current outbreak has risen to 194, 
		nearly half of which were detected in Chaoyang, its most populous 
		district known for its night life, malls and embassies.
 
 China's zero COVID tolerance policy has provoked rare public anger in an 
		important year for President Xi Jinping, over measures that seem surreal 
		to much of the outside world that has chosen to live with the virus, 
		even as infections spread.
 
 Xi is widely expected to secure a third leadership term this fall and 
		authorities would like to avoid a repeat in the capital of the scenes in 
		Shanghai, where some residents leaned out their windows to beat pots and 
		pans in anger as people in protective suits installed fences around 
		their homes.
 
		
		 
		Chinese officials have repeatedly said heavy-handed COVID curbs, 
		including prolonged lockdowns, are needed to save as many lives as 
		possible and prevent the health system from being overwhelmed. 
 In democratically-ruled Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its own, 
		authorities are gradually easing curbs even as daily COVID cases topped 
		10,000 for the first time. Only seven people there have died of COVID 
		this year.
 
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			People walk past a store near the Lama Temple, which has been closed 
			following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Beijing, 
			China April 28, 2022. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins 
            
			 GROWTH FEARS
 China's yuan slipped to 18-month lows against the U.S. dollar on 
			Thursday as COVID outbreaks and lockdowns threatened this year's 
			economic growth target of about 5.5%.
 
 Stock markets were off two-year lows, however, in anticipation of 
			more stimulus after Premier Li Keqiang vowed to stabilise employment 
			and revive disrupted supply chains.
 
 Nomura analysts estimate 46 cities are currently in full or partial 
			lockdowns, affecting 343 million people.
 
 Societe Generale estimates that provinces experiencing significant 
			mobility restrictions account for 80% of gross domestic product 
			(GDP).
 
 Millions of white- and blue-collar workers whose livelihoods depend 
			on mobility between cities have faced severe travel restrictions in 
			recent weeks and the movement of goods has suffered as well.
 
 A transport ministry official estimated passenger traffic for the 
			April 30-May 4 Labour Day break would drop 62% from last year.
 
 China's troubles reverberate well beyond its borders.
 
 Industrial conglomerates GE and 3M, and chipmakers Texas Instruments 
			and SK Hynix have warned that China's COVID curbs are hurting their 
			revenue.
 
 FOCUS SWITCH
 
 A lockdown in Beijing, which has little manufacturing and where many 
			workers can do their jobs from home, would not be as economically 
			damaging. Nevertheless, the capital was in a race against time to 
			avoid Shanghai's mishaps.
 
			
			 New infections in Shanghai were under 100 a day at the start of 
			March before surging to the thousands by the end of the month in 
			China's biggest ever outbreak, prompting a citywide lockdown and 
			upending the lives of its 25 million residents.
 Most people in the commercial hub remain confined to their homes, 
			but authorities were switching focus on post-lockdown measures, 
			including setting up temporary vaccination stations in care homes 
			and preparing community vaccination vehicles.
 
 "On the condition that epidemic risks are controlled, and with the 
			elderly as the focal point, we are actively promoting COVID-19 
			vaccinations," said Zhao Dandan, the deputy director of the 
			municipal health commission.
 
 (Reporting by Ryan Woo, David Stanway, Thomas Suen, Eduardo Baptista, 
			Albee Zhang and Yifan Wang; Writing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by 
			Lincoln Feast and Kim Coghill)
 
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