China to make substantial changes to COVID policy soon- former govt
expert
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[November 04, 2022]
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Substantial
changes to China's "dynamic-zero" COVID-19 policy are set to take place
soon, a former Chinese disease control official told a conference hosted
by investment bank Citi on Friday, according to a recording of the
session heard by Reuters.
Zeng Guang, a former chief epidemiologist at the Chinese Centre for
Disease Control and Prevention who has remained outspoken on China's
COVID fight, said that the conditions for China opening up were
"accumulating", citing new vaccines and progress the country had made in
antiviral drug research.
Asked by Citi chief China economist Yu Xiangrong if China would open up
after its annual meeting of parliament that traditionally takes place
early in early March, he said many new policies would be introduced in
the next five to six months, without detailing what information he was
basing this on.
Citi declined to comment on Zeng's remarks. Zeng and Yu did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
Zeng was part of a top team at China's National Health Commission when
the virus started to spread from the central city of Wuhan to other
parts of China in 2020.
He has previously urged against using excessive measures to fight COVID
that risk exhausting people, and in March said that China would look for
a route to "flexible and controllable opening up".
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People holding laptops line up to get
tested for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at a nucleic acid
testing site at an office building, following the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Shanghai, China, November 3, 2022.
REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
While most of the world has largely
done away with virus curbs, China has resolutely stuck to a
zero-tolerance approach that reacts to even single cases with
lockdowns and mass testing. Those measures have roiled the economy
and are increasingly frustrating the public.
Markets surged this week on hopes that China would relax its
approach, after rumours - based on an unverified note that
circulated on social media - indicated China was planning a
reopening from strict COVID curbs in March of next year.
A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said at the time he was unaware
of the situation. On Wednesday, the country's National Health
Commission said the nation should unwaveringly stick to zero-COVID.
China reported 3,871 new locally transmitted cases for Thursday, its
highest since early May.
(Reporting by Beijing and Shanghai Newsrooms; Editing by Alex
Richardson and Edmund Klamann)
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