Beijing urges millions to keep working from home amid COVID outbreak
menace
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[May 23, 2022]
By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Beijing
authorities extended work-from-home guidance for many of its 22 million
residents to stem a persistent COVID-19 outbreak, while Shanghai
deployed more testing and curbs to hold on to its hard-won 'zero COVID'
status after two months of lockdown.
On Monday, the Chinese capital reported 99 new cases were detected on
May 22, up from 61 the previous day - the largest daily tally so far
during a month-old outbreak that has consistently seen dozens of new
infections every day.
In Shanghai fewer than 600 daily cases were reported for May 22, with
none outside quarantined areas, as there has been the case for much of
the past week.
Analysts at Gavekal Dragonomics estimated last week that fewer than 5%
of Chinese cities were reporting infections, down from a quarter in late
March, in a COVID outbreak that has cast a pall over growth in the
world's no. 2 economy. But vigilance, and concern, remains acute in
Shanghai and the capital.
While there were no new announcements of areas being closed in Beijing,
five of the city's 16 districts advised residents to work from home and
avoid gatherings. Those who have to go to work should have a negative
result on a PCR test taken within 48 hours, and must not deviate from
their home-to-work commute.
"The city's epidemic prevention and control is at a critical moment,"
Beijing's Tongzhou district posted on its WeChat account late on Sunday,
asking residents who work in five other districts to do their jobs from
home this week.
"One step forward and victory is in sight. One step back, and previous
efforts would be wasted."
'MASSIVELY HIT'
Beijing had already curtailed public transport, asked some shopping
malls and other stores and venues to close and sealed buildings where
new cases were detected.
In one large residential compound not under isolation orders, shelves
have been set up for deliveries at the entrance, according to residents,
fuelling concern that preparation was in place for tougher controls on
movement.
The curbs in Beijing, Shanghai and elsewhere in China are leaving behind
significant economic damage and disruption to global supply chains and
international trade.
The highly-transmissible Omicron variant of the virus first discovered
in the city of Wuhan in late 2019 has proven hard to defeat even with
strict measures that starkly contrast the resumption of normal life
elsewhere in the world.
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A medical worker takes a swab sample from a person for a nucleic
acid test at a makeshift testing site, amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, in Beijing, China May 23, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu
Wang
"We've been massively hit," said a
convenience store owner surnamed Sun, whose shop in Beijing has only
been allowed to operate during daytime rather than its usual 24/7
hours.
"Even during the Wuhan outbreak we could stay open the whole time."
In Shanghai, which reopened more than 250 bus routes and a small
part of its sprawling subway system on Sunday, many towns and
districts announced more mass testing for the coming days and asked
residents not to leave their compounds.
The commercial hub of 25 million has allowed more
people to leave their homes for brief periods over the past week,
but it generally plans to keep most restrictions in place this
month, before a lifting its two-month-old lockdown from June 1.
NEW CURBS
However, while more people are being allowed outside, several
residents in various areas of Shanghai said they had been told of
new infections in their vicinity that required new curbs on
movement.
One resident in Hongkou district, which has not reported any new
community-level cases since May 7, said he was told last week not to
leave his flat, having been allowed to move within his compound
previously.
Hongkou was among six districts which have announced some tightening
of curbs in recent days to "consolidate" the results of their
efforts so far.
But such moves made some people fear the virus was making a
comeback.
The top comment on a post by state agency Xinhua on China's
Twitter-like Weibo post on Shanghai's latest numbers read: "This
can't be accurate, zero COVID cases at community level? Our compound
had one new case yesterday."
Asked to comment, the Shanghai government said that all cases found
in recent days were in "sealed" high-risk areas or quarantine
centres, and that any community transmission cases would be
announced on official channels.
(Reporting by Martin Quin Pollard in Beijing, Engen Tham, Winni
Zhou, Brenda Goh in Shanghai and and the Beijing and Shanghai
bureaus; Writing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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