Beijing restricts public transport as
COVID spreads in China
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[May 04, 2022]
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -The
Chinese capital Beijing shut dozens of metro stations and bus routes on
Wednesday in its campaign to stop the spread of COVID-19 and avoid the
fate of Shanghai where millions of residents have been under strict
lockdown for more than a month.
China's uncompromising battle against the coronavirus, which is believed
to have emerged in Wuhan city in late 2019, is undermining its growth
and hurting the international companies invested there, according to the
latest forecasts and data.
The central city of Zhengzhou, home to 12.6 million people and a factory
of Apple's iPhone manufacturer Foxconn, announced work-from-home and
other COVID curbs for the coming week late on Tuesday, joining dozens of
big cities under some form of lockdown.
The capital shut more than 60 subway stations, about 15% of the network,
and 158 bus routes, service providers said. Most of the suspended
stations and routes are in the Chaoyang district, the epicentre of
Beijing's outbreak.
With dozens of new cases a day, Beijing is trying to avoid a full
lockdown, as Shanghai also did initially, instead hoping that mass
testing will find and isolate the virus before it spreads.
The city of 22 million people has closed schools, restaurants, gyms and
entertainment venues, as well as some businesses and residential
buildings in high-risk areas.
In what will be a worrying sign for Beijing residents, workers in
protective gear were seen setting up a two-metre high blue metal wall
around a residential complex, with a sign at the gate reading "Entry
only. No exit."
Twelve out of 16 Beijing districts conducted the second of three rounds
of tests this week, having done three screenings last week.
BLOCKCHAIN MEMORIES
In Shanghai, there's no end in sight for the lockdown.
After more than a month, most people in mainland China's biggest city
are still not allowed to leave their housing compounds.
Some residents have benefited from a tentative easing of precautions
since Sunday, with usually just one member of a household allowed out
for a quick stroll and grocery shopping.
The latest data showed Shanghai found 63 new cases outside areas under
the strictest curbs, suggesting it has a way to go before reaching the
goal of no cases for several days for curbs to ease significantly.
The isolation has fuelled rare outbursts of discontent, with social
media users playing a cat-and-mouse game with censors to keep evidence
of the hardship circulating.
Some have turned to blockchain technology to protect videos, photos and
artwork around the topic from deletion.
Such acts of defiance are awkward for the ruling Communist Party in a
sensitive year in which President Xi Jinping is expected to secure a
third leadership term.
Authorities say the zero-COVID policy aims to save as many lives as
possible, pointing to the millions of COVID deaths outside China, where
many countries are throwing off precautions to "live with COVID" even as
infections spread.
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A man wearing a face mask walks past a closed subway station, amid
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Beijing, China, May
4, 2022. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
GROWTH FORECAST CUT
But the policy is hurting domestic consumption and factory output,
disrupting key global supply chains and shrinking revenues for some
of the biggest international brands, such as Apple, Gucci-parent
Kering and Taco Bell-owner Yum China.
Capital Economics estimates COVID has spread to areas generating 40%
of China's output and 80% of its exports.
"Recent mobility trends suggest that China’s growth momentum
deteriorated significantly in April, with traffic congestion, subway
passenger volume and other high-frequency indicators at their
weakest since ... early 2020," Fitch Ratings said in a note.
Fitch cut its 2022 growth forecast to 4.3%, from 4.8%, well below
China's official 5.5% target.
Starbucks Corp said on Tuesday its sales in China, where the chain
has rapidly expanded in recent years, declined 23%, overshadowing
12% growth in North America.
Foxconn said on Wednesday it was continuing production in Zhengzhou.
Numerous factories were shut after Shanghai went into lockdown from
March. While some have started reopening, getting workers back,
while dealing with snarled supply chains, has proven difficult.
Shanghai authorities helped Tesla transport over 6,000 workers and
carry out disinfection work to reopen its factory last month,
according to a letter that Tesla sent to officials seen by Reuters.
In Shanghai's Lingang free trade zone area, 252 firms, or 52% of the
companies there, had resumed work as of May 3, the Xinhua news
agency reported.
Authorities were subsidising the screening of workers for COVID,
providing hundreds of millions of yuan in relief on rent, and
assigning officials to help implement COVID measures, it said.
International trade is also facing disruption.
A study by Royal Bank of Canada analysts found that a fifth of the
global container ship fleet was stuck in ports.
At Shanghai's port, 344 ships were awaiting berth, a 34% increase
over the past month. Shipping something from a warehouse in China to
one in the United States takes 74 days longer than usual, they said.
(Reporting Aizhu Chen, Hou Xiangming, Brenda Goh and the Beijing and
Shanghai bureaus; Writing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Robert
Birsel)
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