China COVID cases surge to 6-month high as tensions in affected cities
build
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[November 04, 2022]
BEIJING (Reuters) -China on Friday
reported the highest daily count of new local COVID cases in six months
as outbreaks widened, pushing policymakers to walk an even finer line
between holding the virus at bay while keeping a lid on social and
economic angst.
New locally transmitted cases rose to 3,871 on Thursday, according to
regular data released by the National Health Commission, the highest
since early May when Shanghai was fighting its worst outbreak and
Beijing was scrambling to contain one.
Almost three years into the pandemic, China has stuck to a strict
COVID-19 containment policy that has caused mounting economic damage and
widespread frustration. Curbs and lockdowns became more frequent with
the spread of the highly transmissible Omicron strain. China's borders
remain largely shut.
Bloomberg News reported on Friday that China was working on plans to
scrap a system that penalises airlines for bringing virus cases into the
country, citing people familiar with the matter, saying the effort was a
sign authorities were looking for ways to ease the impact of its COVID
policies.
China has yet to describe when or how it will begin to exit from its
current approach. Earlier this week, Chinese shares jumped after rumours
that China was planning a reopening from strict COVID curbs in March.
Domestic tensions have steadily built this year as the endless curbs,
restrictions and lockdowns fuelled unhappiness.
The central city of Wuhan, where the pandemic began, has imposed an
array of temporary lockdowns and restrictions after double-digit new
cases were reported in the past week.
Videos showing rowdy protests inside a compound in Wuhan's Hanyang
district on Thursday night were shared on social media on Friday, with
angry residents seen smashing down COVID disaster relief tents and
calling for an end to their lockdown.
Crowds in the videos, which Reuters could not immediately verify, can be
heard shouting, "Give us freedom, give us freedom!"
'SAVE YOURSELF'
On Wednesday, an industrial park that houses an iPhone factory of
Foxconn entered a seven-day lockdown due to COVID, in a move likely to
intensify pressure on the Apple supplier as it scrambles to quell worker
discontent at the base.
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A medical worker in protective suit
collects a swab from a resident at a free nucleic acid testing site
following new cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in
Lanzhou's Chengguan district, Gansu province, China October 20,
2021. cnsphoto via REUTERS
The lockdown marks a re-tightening
of measures in the central city of Zhengzhou, which unexpectedly
lifted a quasi-lockdown on its nearly 13 million residents just the
day before.
Also this week, posts on rapidly rising food prices in Xining, the
capital of Qinghai province in China's northwest, and a lack of
access to daily essentials because of lockdowns went viral on social
media.
A video on the Twitter-like microblog Weibo showed two residents
handing cartons of milk and bags of vegetables to an elderly woman
who, according to the post, could not buy groceries for three days
after the city shut most shops at the end of October.
On Tuesday, a 3-year-old boy died from carbon monoxide poisoning in
the northwestern city of Lanzhou, a tragedy that his father said was
"indirectly" because strict COVID policies had caused delays in
obtaining treatment.
The hashtag, "Three years of COVID was his entire life", became a
trending topic on Weibo before being scrubbed from the site.
The Lanzhou government and department of health did not respond to
requests for comment.
On Friday, the city of Ordos in the Chinese region of Inner Mongolia
said it will "draw lessons" from the recent "problems" uncovered in
epidemic prevention in some places in China.
"You have the right to take measures to save yourself, or to avoid
danger in a timely manner," it said in a statement.
(Reporting by Ryan Woo, Martin Quin Pollard and Bernard Orr;
Additional reporting by Beijing and Shanghai newsrooms; Editing by
Tom Hogue and Christian Schmollinger)
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