China's big cities, from Dalian to Shenzhen, ramp up COVID curbs
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[August 30, 2022]
BEIJING/
SHENZHEN, China (Reuters) -Several of China's biggest cities imposed
tougher COVID-19 curbs on Tuesday, further crimping the activities of
tens of millions, and sparking fresh concerns for the health of a barely
growing economy.
Metropolises from the southern tech hub of Shenzhen to southwestern
Chengdu and the northeastern port of Dalian ordered measures such as
lockdowns in big districts and business closures aimed at stamping out
fresh outbreaks.
The latest curbs, which will delay the start of the school year for
some, reflect China's strict adherence to a "dynamic COVID zero" policy
of quashing every flare-up.
That insistence makes it an outlier as the rest of the world tries to
live with coronavirus despite the cost to the world's second-largest
economy.
While many of the measures are initially planned to run just a few days,
any major escalation or extension in some of China's biggest cities
risks further hurting already tepid growth.
While the two most populous cities of Beijing and Shanghai have faced
only sporadic cases recently, COVID worries still weighed on Chinese
stocks.
"Markets could once again be hit in the next couple of weeks, likely
triggering another round of cuts by economists on the street," Nomura
warned in a note, highlighting the significance of cities such as
Shenzhen, also a major port.
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On Tuesday, the Shenzhen district of Longhua, which has 2.5 million
residents, closed entertainment venues and wholesale markets, and
suspended large events.
People must show proof of negative test results within 24 hours to enter
residential compounds, and restaurants must limit patrons to half of
capacity, Longhua's district authorities said. The new curbs will run
until Saturday.
The moves followed similar measures on Monday covering three other
districts that affected over 6 million in Shenzhen, which has fought
outbreaks of Omicron sub-variants this year.
City officials have stopped short of a blanket delay for the new school
year, but six parents of young children said their schools had told them
of postponements, as many in parent chat groups expressed anxiety over
the uncertainty.
PORT CITY SHUT DISTRICTS
In Dalian, a major import hub for soybeans and iron ore, a lockdown
begun on Tuesday is set to run until Sunday in the main urban areas with
about 3 million residents. Households may send one person each day to
shop for daily needs.
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A medical worker collects a swab from a
resident at a nucleic acid testing site following the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China
August 30, 2022. REUTERS/David Kirton
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The lockdown requires non-essential workers to work from home, while
manufacturing companies must cut on-site staff and maintain only
basic and urgent operations.
The southwestern city of Chengdu, with a population of 21 million,
ordered blanket closure of public entertainment and cultural venues
from Tuesday.
It planned to delay the start of the fall school semester, and
mandated residents to have proof of negative test result within 24
hours for entry to certain areas.
The northern municipality of Tianjin, home to 13.7 million, started
a new round of citywide COVID testing, its fourth since Saturday.
The city of Tianjin said it would delay resuming offline classes for
many schools.
In the northern city of Shijiazhuang, about 3-1/2-hours drive from
Beijing, four big districts have ordered more than 3 million people
to work from home until Wednesday afternoon, except for those in
essential jobs.
Mainland China reported 1,717 domestically transmitted COVID
infections for Aug. 29, 349 of these symptomatic and 1,368
asymptomatic, official data showed on Tuesday.
From more than 20 places that reported infections for Monday, Tibet,
Qinghai and the province of Sichuan, of which Chengdu is the
capital, accounted for the bulk of daily cases.
Qinghai's capital of Xining, with a population of 2.5 million,
ordered a lockdown from Monday until Thursday morning in key urban
areas, halting public transport and limiting movement.
Cases have been rising in Hong Kong, which does not have the same
zero-COVID measures as mainland China, with government advisers
expecting a daily tally of 10,000 infections this week, fanning
fears of a tightening of just-eased curbs.
(Reporting by Roxanne Liu, Ryan Woo, David Kirton and Anne Marie
Roantree; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Clarence Fernandez)
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