Escaping Shanghai's COVID lockdown only to get trapped in Hainan
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[August 09, 2022]
By Josh Ye
(Reuters) - Brian Hall fled Shanghai in
June to avoid another lockdown of his residential compound, escaping to
China's tropical tourist island of Hainan where he could work remotely
as a public health professor after undertaking 10 days of quarantine.
Hall, who has worked at the New York University Shanghai for the past
two years, is now stuck in Sanya, Hainan's main tourism hub, with no
clarity on when he can get out.
"It has become impossible to leave the city. The hotel where I am
staying is sealed and guests are not permitted to leave our rooms
according to the city's instructions," Hall told Reuters via email.
Hainan province is one of the several Chinese regions that had seen
relatively few cases for more than two years which are now battling
outbreaks, raising the risk of persistent tight restrictions as the
economy weakens.
"My emotions naturally range from complete denial and disbelief, to
anger, sadness, and eventually hopelessness," said Hall, who like
millions in Shanghai, endured a strict two-month lockdown earlier this
year.
"It is not so much the lockdown here, but the memories of the Shanghai
lockdown that have revisited me, and the sense of unease about what the
fall will bring in Shanghai and elsewhere."
Hainan, which recorded just two local symptomatic COVID-19 cases last
year, has reported more than 1,800 domestically transmitted infections
already in August.
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A courier stands on an electric bike to make a delivery over a
barricade, amid lockdown measures to curb the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak in Sanya, Hainan province, China August 6, 2022.
China Daily via REUTERS
Although low by global standards, authorities on the island have locked
down millions of residents, state media reported, as part of China's
"dynamic COVID-zero" policy that aims to stamp out outbreaks as soon as
possible. People are only allowed out only for certain reasons such as
COVID tests, grocery shopping and essential job roles.
About 178,000 tourists were stranded in Hainan, including around 57,000
in Sanya, state media has reported.
Hall, who has to stay in his room and relies on the hotel for daily
essentials including food and water, said he couldn't predict what was
likely to happen but just had to take it as it comes.
"We must remain flexible in our plans and able to accept these
disruptions if we desire to live and work here."
(Reporting by Josh Ye in Hong Kong; Writing by Farah Master; Editing by
Lincoln Feast.)
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