'We demand an explanation!' Shanghai residents vent COVID lockdown
irritation
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[March 30, 2022]
By Engen Tham and Brenda Goh
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Frustrated and locked
down, residents of Shanghai have taken to social media to vent,
questioning the practicality of persisting with China's zero-tolerance
approach to COVID-19 in its most populous city.
In the home to 26 million people, videos and images of crowded
quarantine centres were shared as authorities extended lockdown from the
east of the city to parts of the west, posting calls for help with
medical treatment and purchasing food.
One video widely shared on Chinese social media featured an angry
exchange between a group of patients and hazmat suit-clad healthcare
workers at the vast Shanghai World Expo Center - temporarily converted
into a giant quarantine facility.
"We demand an explanation!" the person filming the video shouts in the
video.
"There's repeated cross-infection here, there's no water in the toilet,
poo and pee everywhere, it's all a mess!"
Shanghai authorities on Sunday abandoned a targeted approach and
announced a two-stage lockdown after the total number of new local cases
reached closed to over 13,000 in nine days. On Wednesday, officials
reports new daily cases jumped by a third on March 29 compared with the
previous day.
While the numbers are small by global standards, China's "dynamic
clearance" approach means that all people who test positive are sent to
central quarantine centres or hospitals. Close contacts and neighbours
must quarantine at home.
Shanghai's distribution of millions of self-administered antigen testing
kits to detect cases quickly, which China only approved this month, has
also sown some confusion and fear.
One person who self-tested positive on Saturday, along with 10 work
colleagues, told Reuters on Wednesday he was still waiting to be
transported to a central facility despite repeated calls to a COVID
hotline. He declined to be named citing privacy reasons.
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A worker in a protective suit keeps watch outside a cordoned-off
entrance following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in
Shanghai, China March 30, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song
Others expressed frustration over
access to medical care and complained about difficulties in
purchasing food as delivery services were overloaded. Authorities
have pledged to keep food supply channels open and ensure people
receive essential medical treatment.
A man surnamed Cao told Reuters his father had not been able to
access dialysis treatment after the hospital he usually visits was
shut due to COVID controls.
"As relatives of patients, we are extremely
helpless," he said, declining to give his full name out of privacy
concerns.
The Shanghai government declined to provide immediate comment,
citing epidemic control work.
To be sure, China's approach has broad domestic support, and many
see its approach as successful in keeping COVID case counts and
deaths extremely low in China while it has killed more than 6
million people worldwide and infected 480 million.
But given the vast majority of cases in Shanghai have thus far been
without symptoms, there have been calls to reexamine the feasibility
of "dynamic clearance" in the city given the strain on public
resources.
"'Targeted prevention and control' is the undisputed king when the
number of cases is small," commented an internet user using the
handle hemuch, whose posting on experiences in central quarantine
went viral.
"But now that the virus has spread so widely and so easily, is it
possible to slowly reduce the resources used for tracking and
tracing And release the resources being used for asymptomatic cases
who do not need treatment?"
(Reporting by Engen Tham, Brenda Goh, Jason Xue and Eduardo Baptista;
Additional reporting by Shanghai newsroom and Albee Zhang; Editing
by Kenneth Maxwell)
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