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		Shanghai revives after two-month COVID lockdown, wary of a new one
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		 [June 01, 2022] By 
		Brenda Goh and Jason Xue 
 SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Shanghai sprung back 
		to life on Wednesday after two months of bitter isolation under a 
		ruthless COVID-19 lockdown, with shops reopening and people going back 
		to offices, parks and markets, hoping to never go through a similar 
		ordeal again.
 
 For many of the 25 million residents finally able to experience the 
		outdoor world again in China's largest and most cosmopolitan city, 
		street life looked like a flashback from a distant memory.
 
 Cars were back on the roads, while commuters hopped on trains and buses 
		again. Joggers, skaters and dog walkers defied the muggy heat to roam 
		through riverfront parks.
 
 There was the joy of reuniting with close ones, the relief at being able 
		to shop for anything, but also the wariness of another potential 
		outbreak as people licked their wounds after a sustained period of 
		frustration, stress and economic loss.
 
		
		 
		A Shanghai resident surnamed Dong, who was drinking beer with a friend 
		in the city's former French Concession neighbourhood, was not in a 
		celebratory mood. 
 "It's not like the happiness you feel when you welcome the New Year. 
		It's very complicated. The last two months have not been easy for 
		anyone," she said.
 
 "I'm happy because I can see my friend, but when I was alone I really 
		wanted to cry."
 
 Shanghai's lockdown was the result of China's "zero COVID" strategy of 
		eradicating outbreaks at just about any cost as the country went against 
		the global consensus that co-existence with the virus was inevitable.
 
 The fear that COVID - and with it, strict restrictions on social life - 
		can return was visible. Police and clerks at public-facing desks were 
		wearing full hazmat suits. Many commuters wore gloves and face shields. 
		All wore masks.
 
 There were also long queues at PCR testing sites, with residents needing 
		recent negative results to take public transport and enter various 
		buildings, and many queued at vaccination centres.
 
 Cafes like Starbucks reopened but restaurant dining remains largely 
		banned, shops can operate at only 75% capacity and gyms will reopen 
		later.
 
 While people went to the malls again, they mostly restricted themselves 
		to small pleasures such as bubble tea, avoiding flashy expenses.
 
 "This is a time to enjoy being outside but also to protect yourself and 
		protect your money," teacher Yang Zengdong said. "This is not the time 
		to spend and be wasteful.”
 
		
		 
		I’m not afraid of getting the virus, but I am afraid of a positive test 
		result and centralised quarantine.”
 TOUGH RECOVERY
 
 Businesses were also having mixed feelings about their outlook after the 
		lockdown, which battered Shanghai's manufacturing and export sectors, 
		disrupted supply chains in China and around the world and slowed 
		international trade.
 
 Factory activity in the world's second-largest economy shrank less 
		sharply in May as some production resumed, but it was still the 
		second-sharpest monthly slump since February 2020, in the initial stages 
		of the COVID pandemic.
 
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			Staff members wait at an entrance to enter a shopping mall, after 
			the lockdown placed to curb the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) 
			outbreak was lifted in Shanghai, China June 1, 2022. REUTERS/Aly 
			Song
 
            
			
			
			 
 
            Many analysts expect the economy to contract in the 
			second quarter, and say the recovery will be a grinding process 
			heavily dependent on COVID developments, with consumers and 
			businesses unlikely to regain confidence immediately.
 But some pent-up consumption was noticeable.
 
 People bought fresh fruit and vegetables and other products they 
			craved during the lockdown when they could not always order 
			everything they wanted, relying heavily on group orders of basic 
			supplies with neighbours.
 
 "I bought some soy beans, this was not possible to buy through 
			group-buys, some broccoli, and some prawns," said a woman surnamed 
			Wang as she pushed a bicycle laden with groceries.
 
 "This is my first day out."
 
 'THANK YOU'
 
 The city's handling of the lockdown provoked rare protests, with 
			people at times banging pots and pans outside their windows to show 
			discontent. Those were awkward scenes for the ruling Communist Party 
			in a sensitive year when President Xi Jinping is expected to secure 
			a precedent-breaking third leadership term.
 
 Chinese authorities have threatened action against critics of its 
			COVID policy, which they say aims to avoid the millions of deaths 
			caused by the virus around the world. The United States alone has 
			recorded about a million.
 
 Shanghai's government published a "thank you" letter to residents, 
			with medical staff, police, the army, journalists and "grass-roots" 
			cadres among many getting special mention for their contributions.
 
 
            
			 
			"Under the strong leadership of the Communist Party's Central 
			Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping at the core, after more than two 
			months of continuous fighting, the arduous battle to defend Shanghai 
			has achieved a major milestone," it said.
 
 "This is a moment everyone has been waiting for... we would like to 
			thank all Shanghai citizens in particular for their support and 
			dedication!"
 
 On social media, some users responded to the letter with victorious 
			celebrations, while others demanded a letter of apology instead.
 
 "Shouldn't those who wield great power and can arbitrarily inflict 
			harm on others be held accountable?" one user commented.
 
 (Additional reporting by Casey Hall, David Stanway, Winni Zhou, 
			Samuel Shen in Shanghai and Sophie Yu in Beijing; Writing by Marius 
			Zaharia; Editing by Michael Perry and Kim Coghill)
 
            
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