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		'Hard to believe it's actually happening': Shanghai to lift COVID 
		lockdown
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		 [May 31, 2022] 
		By Casey Hall and Brenda Goh 
 SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Shanghai authorities 
		on Tuesday began dismantling fences around housing compounds and ripping 
		police tape off public squares and buildings before the lifting of a 
		two-month lockdown in China's largest city at midnight.
 
 On Monday evening, some people allowed out of their compounds for brief 
		walks took advantage of suspended traffic to congregate for a beer and 
		ice cream on deserted streets. But there was a sense of wariness and 
		anxiety among residents.
 
 "I feel a little nervous," said Joseph Mak, who works in education. 
		"It's hard to believe it's actually happening."
 
 Most will be stuck indoors again until midnight as they have been for 
		the past two months under a strictly enforced lockdown that has caused 
		income losses and stress and despair to people struggling to access food 
		or get emergency healthcare.
 
 The prolonged isolation has fuelled public anger and rare protests 
		inside the city of 25 million people and battered its manufacturing and 
		export-heavy economy, disrupted supply chains in China and around the 
		world, and slowed international trade.
 
		
		 
		Life is set to return to something more like normal from Wednesday, when 
		the passes issued by residential buildings for people to go out for a 
		few hours will be scrapped, public transport will resume and residents 
		can go back to work.
 "This is a day that we dreamed of for a very long time," Shanghai 
		government spokeswoman Yin Xin told reporters.
 
 "Everyone has sacrificed a lot. This day has been hard-won, and we need 
		to cherish and protect it, and welcome back the Shanghai we are familiar 
		with and missed."
 
 By a creek in Shanghai on Tuesday, a marinated goose store was 
		restocking shelves, a bar was doing last-minute renovations, and 
		cleaners were scrubbing shop windows.
 
 Curbs will ease for about 22.5 million people in low-risk areas. 
		Residents will still have to wear masks and avoid gatherings. Dining 
		inside restaurants remains banned. Shops can operate at 75% capacity. 
		Gyms will reopen later.
 
 Residents will have to test every 72 hours to take public transport and 
		enter public venues. Tough quarantine is still in store for anyone 
		catching COVID and their close contacts.
 
 LOCKDOWN-WARY
 
 China is alone among major countries enforcing a "zero COVID" policy of 
		eradicating outbreaks at just about any cost.
 
 Julian MacCormac, chair of the British Chamber in China, said Shanghai 
		brought COVID under control at "very significant personal and economic 
		cost".
 
 "What has materially changed to ensure that this will not happen 
		again?," he asked. "That’s where the uncertainty lies."
 
 Todd Pearson, managing director of Camel Hospitality Group, which 
		operates restaurants, bars and gyms in and around Shanghai, is wary.
 
 
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			Workers dismantle barriers at a residential area, as the city 
			prepares to end the lockdown placed to curb the coronavirus disease 
			(COVID-19) outbreak in Shanghai, China May 31, 2022. REUTERS/Aly 
			Song 
            
			
			
			 His restaurants can only do 
			deliveries, which bring about 5% of revenue, not enough to pay 
			salaries and rent. At least from midnight his workers who have been 
			sleeping on site can finally go home. "I’m hopeful that they will rush things along to 
			restart the economy," Pearson said. "I just hope it’s not at the 
			cost of more outbreaks. I’m not sure many businesses or the people 
			could handle much more."
 Economic activity in China has somewhat recovered in May from a 
			dismal April as COVID curbs in manufacturing hubs were gradually 
			relaxed, although movement controls still depressed demand and 
			restrained production.
 
 FUN WITH FLAGS
 
 Shanghai reported 31 cases for May 30, down from 67 a day earlier, 
			mirroring a downtrend throughout China to less than 200 infections 
			nationwide.
 The end of Shanghai's lockdown does not mean 
			returning to pre-COVID ways of living.
 Some banking clerks said they will have to wear full hazmat suits 
			and face shields as they start facing the public from Wednesday. One 
			said he would take some basic supplies to work, in case a colleague 
			tests positive and staff are required to isolate in the office.
 
 The city's handling of the lockdown provoked rare protests, with 
			people at times banging pots and pans outside their windows to show 
			their discontent.
 
 "The Shanghai government needs to make a public apology in order to 
			obtain the understanding and support of the people of Shanghai and 
			repair the damaged relationship between the government and the 
			people," Qu Weiguo, a professor at the Fudan University school of 
			foreign languages, posted on WeChat.
 
 The displays of resentment come during a sensitive year for 
			President Xi Jinping, who is expected to secure a third leadership 
			term this autumn.
 
 One compound hanged a Chinese flag for residents to take pictures 
			with as they lined up for one more PCR test before the reopening.
 
			
			 "It’s worth celebrating," said one volunteer at the testing site, 
			who was more optimistic about COVID than those getting their noses 
			swabbed. "Probably we won’t have it again in the rest of our lives.”
 (Additional reporting by David Stanway, Winni Zhou, Brenda Goh, 
			Yifan Wang, David Kirton, Albee Zhang, Stella Qiu and the Beijing 
			and Shanghai bureaus; Writing by Marius Zaharia; Editing by Michael 
			Perry and Angus MacSwan)
 
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