Shanghai reopens cinemas but COVID risks
'relatively high'
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[July 08, 2022]
By Brenda Goh and Sophie Yu
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Shanghai reopened most
cinemas on Friday, sticking to a plan of gradual resumption of daily
activities after it lifted a two-month COVID-19 lockdown in June, while
also trying, like several other Chinese cities, to contain resurgent
infections.
Seeking to avoid a repeat of the ordeal that the commercial hub of 25
million suffered in April and May, Shanghai's strategy rests on frequent
COVID testing, thorough contact tracing and isolated lockdowns of
residential buildings and other venues.
Tougher restrictions may be needed if it fails to contain the virus.
That would be a dire prospect for its residents who are only just
recovering from the income losses, mental stress, and poor access to
basic necessities suffered during the lockdown.
The city's latest outbreak is linked to illegal karaoke services in a
single building.
"Hidden transmission has taken place for a while and the risk of further
community spread remains relatively high," National Health Commission
official Lei Zhenglong told reporters.
Several other cities across China were also racing to smother outbreaks
early, once again raising concerns about China's economic growth outlook
and potential disruptions to supply chains and international trade.
The efforts, which have fuelled frustration among Chinese in a sensitive
year for the ruling Communist Party, are part of China's "zero COVID"
strategy to eradicate any outbreaks as soon as they occur, despite the
great costs incurred.
Premier Li Keqiang was quoted by state media on Thursday as saying that
the world's second-largest economy was recovering from the supply shocks
incurred while fighting COVID earlier this year, "but the foundation is
unstable".
China is facing geopolitical headwinds, a property market downturn, and
rising borrowing costs in most of its export markets, and some analysts
say its growth target of around 5.5% this year may be out of reach.
President Xi Jinping, who is expected to secure a precedent-breaking
third term later this year, has said China should not treat the virus as
endemic as much of the world now does, as that would put many lives at
risk.
With no end in sight to anti-COVID vigilance, residents across China
will have to put up with relentless testing and the prospect of facing
quarantine at any time, among other inconveniences.
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Medical workers in protective suits stand at a nucleic acid testing
site in Shanghai, China July 7, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song
Shanghai will conduct another round
of mass COVID tests on Saturday and Sunday, in line with a plan to
test its entire population every weekend until the end of the month.
The city just finished a Tuesday to Thursday testing campaign.
Meanwhile, Beijing has dropped plans to enforce
vaccine mandates on most people entering crowded venues, following
strong online backlash against the measure announced earlier this
week. No new cases were detected in the capital on Thursday.
JURASSIC IS ON
Shanghai reported 45 new COVID cases for July 7, down from 54 the
day before, mostly among people already under isolation orders.
The city is gradually reopening cinemas, theatres
and other performance venues from Friday according to its
post-lockdown plans, though capacity is capped at 50%. Some venues
postponed their reopening as a precaution, Chinese media reported.
Cinema ticket sales exceeded 1.4 million yuan ($208,868) by noon of
Friday, and Jurassic World Dominion was the most popular film,
according to Maoyan Entertainment.
Most of Shanghai's 300-plus cinemas had been closed since early
March.
China's total caseload for Thursday was 478, higher than Wednesday's
409 - numbers which authorities in most other countries would now
largely ignore.
Most cases were detected in the eastern Anhui
province where more than 1 million people in small towns are locked
down. There were dozens of new cases also in the Jiangsu province,
and a few in Shaanxi and others.
NHC's Lei said some places in China were slow with vaccinating the
elderly and officials there should work harder. He did not specify
the regions.
($1 = 6.7028 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Brenda Goh, Jing Wang and Sophie Yu in Shanghai and
Roxanne Liu in Beijing; Writing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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