COVID travel curbs against Chinese visitors 'discriminatory'- state
media
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[December 30, 2022]
By Bernard Orr and David Latona
BEIJING/MADRID (Reuters) -Chinese state-media have railed against the
growing number of foreign governments imposing COVID tests on travellers
from China, calling the measures "discriminatory."
Having kept its borders all but shut for three years, imposing a strict
regime of lockdowns and relentless testing, Beijing abruptly reversed
course toward living with the virus on Dec. 7, and infections have
spread rapidly in recent weeks.
South Korea and Spain on Friday joined a growing list of countries,
including the United States, India and others, which have imposed COVID
tests for travellers from China over concerns about the scale of its
COVID outbreak and scepticism over Beijing's health statistics.
Malaysia said it would screen all international arrivals for fever.
"The real intention is to sabotage China's three years of COVID-19
control efforts and attack the country's system," state-run tabloid
Global Times said in an article late on Thursday, calling the
restrictions "unfounded" and "discriminatory."
China will stop requiring inbound travellers to go into quarantine from
Jan. 8. But it will still demand a negative PCR test result within 48
hours before departure.
Senior Chinese health officials held a video conference with the World
Health Organization on Friday and exchanged views the current epidemic
situation, China's National Health Commission said in a statement
without elaborating further.
WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said earlier in the day
that the organization needed more information to assess the latest surge
in infections in China, without taking a position on the issue of travel
tests.
TESTS
Not all countries are imposing tests. European Union members, in
particular, are divided.
Over the past days, officials in France, Germany and Portugal have said
they saw no need for now for new restrictions, while Austria has
stressed the economic benefits of Chinese tourists' return to Europe.
Global spending by Chinese visitors was worth more than $250 billion a
year before the pandemic.
Acting a day after EU health officials failed to agree on a joint course
of action, Spain followed Italy's lead to become the second of the
bloc's 27 members to require tests for travellers from China.
"At a national level, we will implement airport controls requiring all
passengers coming from China to show a negative COVID-19 test or proof
of a full vaccination course," Health Minister Carolina Darias said.
EU health experts are expected to hold a crisis response meeting next
week, according to an EU source.
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Passengers wait in a queue, after Italy
has ordered coronavirus disease (COVID-19) antigen swabs and virus
sequencing for all travellers coming from China, where cases are
surging, at the Malpensa Airport in Milan, Italy, December 29, 2022.
REUTERS/Jennifer Lorenzini
In the meantime, EU health chief Stella Kyriakides wrote to the
bloc's health ministers to suggest they immediately scale up genomic
sequencing of COVID-19 infections and monitoring of waste water,
including from airports, to detect any new variants given the virus
surge in China.
The U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention is also
considering sampling wastewater from international aircraft to track
any emerging new variants, the agency told Reuters.
The United States has raised concerns about potential mutations of
the virus as it sweeps through the world's most populous country, as
well as over China's data transparency.
Meanwhile, a COVID vaccination campaign for German nationals in
China started its pilot phase, the German ambassador in Beijing,
Patricia Flor said on Twitter. A shipment of 11,500 doses of the
BioNTech vaccine arrived last week, enough to give one shot each to
half of the 20,000 or so German nationals residing in China.
'EXCESS MORTALITY'
The lifting of restrictions in China, after widespread protests
against them in November, has overwhelmed hospitals and funeral
homes across the country, with scenes of people on intravenous drips
by the roadside and lines of hearses outside crematoria fuelling
public concern.
Health experts say China has been caught ill-prepared by the U-turn
in policies long championed by President Xi Jinping.
They say the elderly in rural areas may be particularly vulnerable
because of inadequate medical resources. Next month's Lunar New Year
festival, when hundreds of millions travel to their home towns, will
add to the risk.
China, a country of 1.4 billion people, reported one new COVID death
for Thursday, same as the day before - numbers which do not match
the experience of other countries after they reopened.
UK-based health data firm Airfinity said on Thursday around 9,000
people in China are probably dying each day from COVID. Cumulative
deaths in China since Dec. 1 have likely reached 100,000, with
infections totalling 18.6 million, it said.
China's chief epidemiologist Wu Zunyou said on Thursday that the
difference between the number of deaths in the current wave of
infections and the death rate for the same period in pandemic-free
years would be studied to calculate the "excess mortality" and gauge
any potential underestimate of deaths from COVID-19.
(Additional reporting by John Revill in Zurich, Kirsti Knolle in
Berlin, Phil Blenkinsip in Brussels; Writing by Marius Zaharia and
Ingrid Melander; Editing by Gerry Doyle, Simon Cameron-Moore and
Tomasz Janowski)
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