Shanghai to lock down millions again for mass COVID testing
Send a link to a friend
[June 10, 2022]
By Brenda Goh and Martin Quin Pollard
SHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) -China's
commercial hub of Shanghai will lock down millions of people for mass
COVID-19 testing this weekend - just 10 days after lifting its gruelling
two-month lockdown - unsettling residents and raising concerns about the
business impact.
Racing to stop a wider outbreak after discovering a handful of community
cases, including a cluster traced to a popular beauty salon, authorities
have ordered PCR testing for all residents in 14 of Shanghai's 16
districts over the weekend.
Five of the districts said residents would not be allowed to leave their
homes while the testing was carried out. A notice issued by Changning
district described the stay-home requirement as "closed management" of
the community being sampled.
The latest scare triggered a rush to grocery stores and online platforms
to stock up on food, as users of China's Twitter-like Weibo expressed
fear they could be locked down for longer, having only started going
back to work after the last lockdown was lifted on June 1.
Some areas had remained sealed off or quickly returned to lockdown due
to infections and their close contacts.
"The residential compound next to mine has already been locked down,"
said Zhang Jian, a 34 year old real estate agent.
"If there is a mass testing and there is another positive case in the
compound, it will have a serious impact on our lives."
TESTING, TESTING
While China's infection rate is low by global standards, President Xi
Jinping has doubled down on a zero-COVID policy that authorities say is
needed to protect the elderly and the medical system, even as other
countries try to live with the virus.
Mainland China reported 151 new coronavirus cases for June 9, of which
45 were symptomatic and 106 were asymptomatic, the National Health
Commission said on Friday..
The latest round of mass testing comes on top of already onerous testing
requirements that Shanghai introduced for its 25 million residents after
easing its earlier lockdown.
[to top of second column]
|
Workers in protective suits set up barriers outside a building,
following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Shanghai,
China June 9, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Galbraith
Residents must prove that they have
been tested within the last 72 hours to enter areas like malls and
offices - or even to use subways and buses. Many have become
frustrated by the prospect of queuing for hours to be tested.
Meanwhile, Beijing on Thursday shut entertainment
and internet venues in two of the capital's largest districts after
tracing cases to a few bars.
AT RISK OF ONE POSITIVE CASE
Shanghai's earlier lockdown fuelled widespread frustration, anger
and even rare protests among its residents, many of whom grappled
with lost income, the loss of freedom, the death of friends and
relatives, and even hunger.
It also battered China's economy, disrupting supply
chains and slowing international trade. And the latest setback has
hit sentiment in financial markets.
Travel into China remains severely curtailed, with most
international flights cancelled for the past two years and lengthy
quarantines for those who manage to arrive.
The European Chamber of Commerce said Shanghai offices belonging to
its members were only operating at 30-50% capacity while factories
were running at above 80%.
"We are at the mercy of mass testing. Factories will have to shut
down even if only one positive case is detected," said Bettina
Schoen-Behanzin, vice president of the European Chamber, adding that
European companies were becoming more cautious and rethinking future
investments in China.
(Reporting by Brenda Goh, Winni Zhou and Engen Tham in Shanghai,
Martin Pollard in Beijng and the Beijing and Shanghai Newsrooms;
editing by Richard Pullin & Simon Cameron-Moore)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|