China daily local COVID cases hit two-year high of over 1,500
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[March 12, 2022]
By Brenda Goh
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Mainland China reported
more than 1,500 new local COVID-19 infections on Saturday, the most
since the first nationwide outbreak in early 2020, as the Omicron
variant prompted Beijing to introduce self-testing kits for the first
time.
China's current case count is far fewer than those of many other
countries, but the growing number could complicate Beijing's
"dynamic-clearance" ambition to suppress contagion as quickly as
possible.
The National Health Commission on Saturday said it had found 476 locally
transmitted cases for Friday, including five people initially classified
as asymptomatic who developed symptoms later.
There were 1,048 domestically transmitted asymptomatic infections, which
China does not classify as confirmed cases, up from 703 a day earlier.
Beijing has ordered its localities to stick to the "dynamic clearing"
policy and to prevent a large-scale rebound, prompting several cities to
take measures such as cancelling group events, launching rounds of mass
testing and cutting face-to-face classes in school.
At the same time the country is tweaking its testing regime in response
to the spread of the Omicron variant, after having in the past two years
required medical workers to swab members of the public using nucleic
acid tests that require labs to process samples.
Health authorities said they would allow the general public to buy such
kits in stores and online for the first time and on Saturday they
approved five COVID-19 antigen kits made by local companies to be used
for self-testing.
"In order to deal with how Omicron spreads, we need to promote a model
of antigen screening and nucleic acid tests, enable the public to
purchase tests by themselves, which is conducive to early detection,"
Chinese Vice Premier Sun Chunlan was quoted by state broadcaster CCTV as
telling a government meeting on Saturday.
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Residents line up outside a nucleic acid testing site of a hospital,
following cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Shanghai,
China March 11, 2022. China Daily via REUTERS
The capital of Beijing was among
cities that took steps to tighten measures. The city government said
that people entering the city should take nucleic acid tests and
avoid joining in group meals or gatherings in the first seven days.
In the financial hub of Shanghai, the Disneyland resort said it
would reduce its guest capacity and from Sunday require visitors to
present negative nucleic acid test results taken within 24 hours.
The venue for the Canton Fair, China's oldest and biggest trade
fair, in the southern province of Guangzhou has been temporarily
closed as it was recently visited by a suspected confirmed case,
local authorities said.
The northeastern province of Jilin said on Saturday it had dismissed
the mayor of Jilin city and a district head in the capital,
Changchun. The province has been one of the hardest-hit regions in
the latest outbreak.
Changchun has ordered all but essential businesses to halt
operations and banned its 9 million residents from leaving their
residential compounds for non-essential reasons. Similar measures
have been applied in urban areas of Jilin city.
(Reporting by Brenda Goh, additional reporting by Roxanne Liu and
Steven Bian; Editing by William Mallard and Clelia Oziel)
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