Shanghai takes baby steps towards ending COVID lockdown
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[May 27, 2022] By
David Stanway and Roxanne Liu
SHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) -Shanghai took
more gradual steps on Friday towards lifting its COVID-19 lockdown while
Beijing was investigating cases where its strict curbs were affecting
other medical treatments as China soldiered on with its uneven exit from
restrictions.
The financial hub and the capital have been hot spots, with a harsh
two-month lockdown to arrest a coronavirus spike in Shanghai and tight
movement restrictions to stamp out a small but stubborn outbreak in
Beijing.
Elsewhere, some border areas in the northeastern province of Jilin
reported transmissions of the virus with an unclear source. Jilin
borders Russia and North Korea, which has imposed a nationwide COVID
lockdown.
The curbs have battered the world's second-biggest economy even as most
countries have been seeking to return to something like normal. Many
Chinese, from the urban youth to low-skilled rural migrant workers, have
complained about lost income, difficulty sourcing food and mental
stress.
China's economy is staggering back to its feet but data shows only a
grinding and partial recovery, with businesses from retailers to
chipmakers warning of slow sales as domestic consumers slam the brakes
on spending.
Electricity consumption by Shanghai's large industrial enterprises rose
steadily in the first three weeks of May to 83% of 2021 levels, Ruan
Qiantu, head of the city's branch of the State Grid, told reporters.
The utility will work to avoid outages as demand recovers and the summer
consumption peak approaches, Ruan said. "We are actively responding to
the demands of enterprises."
As Shanghai, China's most populous city, aims to essentially end its
lockdown from Wednesday, the authorities have been allowing more people
out of their homes and more businesses to reopen over the past week. But
most residents remain confined to their compounds and most shops can
only do deliveries.
The district of Pudong, home to the Port of Shanghai, the city's largest
airport and its main finance centre, reopened 115 bus routes on Friday.
Shanghai is slowly expanding public transport after reopening four of
its 20 subway lines and more than 250 bus routes on Sunday.
More than 30 parks had reopened as of Thursday, with visitor numbers
capped below 50% of their maximum capacity, the Shanghai Daily reported.
By Tuesday 70 more parks will reopen.
China hopes that a new approach of relentless, blanket testing might
help other cities avoid more damaging, Shanghai-like measures by
detecting outbreaks early.
Some 28 cities were conducting mass testing on May 26, up from 23 on May
17, Huatai Securities estimated.
Shanghai's latest daily COVID caseload was below 300, with no cases
outside quarantined areas, as has been the case for most of the past two
weeks. Beijing reported 29 daily cases, down from 45 the day before.
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Residents chat through gaps in barriers at a closed residential area
during lockdown, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak,
in Shanghai, China, May 27, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song
Jilin's daily tally for the past five days has been
in single digits.
Close to 90% of China's population was vaccinated,
but the rate falls to 82.4% for those aged 60 and over, health
officials said on Friday.
The capital this week has stepped up quarantines, reduced workplace
attendance and cracked down on people flouting instructions. The
strict approach has sometimes caused other problems.
Beijing officials are investigating incidents of delayed treatment
for patients with serious diseases, and some emergency services
officers have been suspended, the state-backed People's Daily said
on Friday.
A farmer surnamed Song wrote on social media that his 32-year-old
son had died on May 11 in Beijing after waiting for an hour with
acute chest pain for an ambulance. Song said he was told that there
had been confusion over whether his son could be admitted due to
COVID controls at hospitals.
"This practice ... brought irreparable losses to a peasant family
with only one son and caused serious negative effects and smears to
the anti-epidemic effort," Song wrote on Thursday.
Cases of slow access to medical care for pregnant women and other
non-COVID patients during lockdowns caused outrage earlier this
year.
GRINDING
Profits at China's industrial firms fell the fastest in two years in
April, data showed on Friday, as high raw material prices and
snarled supply chains squeezed margins and disrupted factories.
Car sales in the world's largest auto market have slowed
dramatically, gamers are buying fewer consoles and consumers are
unwilling to replace their smartphones or laptops.
But this month has seen some improvement.
Chinese electric vehicle maker Xpeng is accelerating deliveries
after resuming double-shift production in mid-May at its plant in
the southern city Zhaoqing, chairman He Xiaopeng told analysts this
week.
Tesla added a second shift at its Shanghai plant on Thursday.
Alibaba Group cited pandemic-related risks and other uncertainties
for not issuing a forecast for its new business year and the central
bank said it would promote more credit for smaller firms.
(Reporting by the Beijing and Shanghai bureaus; Writing by Marius
Zaharia; Editing by William Mallard, Robert Birsel)
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