China COVID cases rise, hard-hit Beijing tightens entry rules
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[November 21, 2022]
By Liz Lee and Martin Quin Pollard
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's capital warned
on Monday that it was facing its most severe test of the COVID-19
pandemic, shutting businesses and schools in hard-hit districts and
tightening rules for entering the city as infections ticked higher in
Beijing and nationally.
China is fighting numerous COVID-19 flare ups, from Zhengzhou in central
Henan province to Chongqing in the southwest. It reported 26,824 new
local cases for Sunday, nearing the country's daily infection peak in
April.
It also recorded two deaths in Beijing, up from one on Saturday, which
was China's first since late May.
Guangzhou, a southern city of nearly 19 million people that is battling
the largest of China's recent outbreaks, ordered a five-day lockdown for
Baiyun, its most populous district. It also suspended dine-in services
and shut night clubs and theatres in the city's main business district.
The latest wave is testing China's resolve to stick to adjustments it
has made to its zero-COVID policy, which calls for cities to be more
targeted in their clampdown measures and steer away from widespread
lockdowns and testing that have strangled the economy and frustrated
residents.
Asian share markets and oil prices slipped on Monday amid investor
concern over the economic fallout from the intensifying COVID situation
in China, with the risk aversion benefiting bonds and the dollar.
Beijing reported 962 new infections on Sunday, up from 621 a day
earlier, and a further 316 cases for the first 15 hours of Monday.
City authorities said people arriving in the capital from elsewhere in
China would need to undergo three days of COVID testing before they are
permitted to leave their homes or accommodation.
"The city is facing its most complex and severe prevention and control
situation since the outbreak of the coronavirus," Liu Xiaofeng, the
deputy director of Beijing's municipal Centre for Disease Control and
Prevention, told a media briefing.
'YOU CAN'T GO ANYWHERE'
Residents in Beijing's sprawling Chaoyang district, home to 3.5 million
people as well as embassies and office complexes, were urged to stay
home, with schools going online.
Streets were unusually quiet, and stores in the district other than
those selling groceries appeared mostly shut.
Restaurants were empty but for one or two staff huddled at entrances
around small tables showing "takeout only" signs.
"You can't go anywhere. Everything's closed. Customers cannot come,
either. What can you do? You can do nothing," said Jia Xi, 32, a medical
industry salesman.
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A worker in protective suit keeps a
watch outside a public toilet to inspect the health code of
visitors, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in
Shanghai, China, November 21, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song
Staff at building entrances carried
out strict checks of mobile phone health apps with the command now
familiar to all Beijingers: "Scan the code!"
CHANGE OF APPROACH
Several Chinese cities began cutting routine community COVID-19
testing last week, including the northern city of Shijiazhuang,
which became the subject of fervent speculation that it could be a
test bed for policy relaxation.
But late on Sunday, Shijiazhuang announced it would conduct mass
testing in six of its eight districts over the next five days after
new daily local cases hit 641. It also encouraged residents to shop
online and ordered some schools to suspend in-person teaching.
"They lasted a week," said one popular comment on Weibo on
Shijiazhuang's curbs, which was among the most viewed topics on the
social media platform.
The People's Daily newspaper, the official organ of China's ruling
Communist Party, on Monday published an article reiterating the need
to catch infections early but to avoid taking a "one-size-fits-all"
approach, its eighth such piece since China announced its 20
adjusted measures on Nov. 11.
HOPES AND WARNINGS
China's recent efforts to make its COVID-19 curbs more targeted have
sparked investor hopes of a more significant easing even as China
faces its first winter battling the highly transmissible Omicron
variant.
Many analysts expect such a shift to begin only in March or April,
however, with the government arguing that President Xi Jinping's
signature zero-COVID policy saves lives and is necessary to prevent
the healthcare system being overwhelmed.
Experts argue full reopening requires a massive vaccination booster
effort and a change in messaging in a country where the disease
remains widely feared. Authorities say they plan to build more
hospital capacity and fever clinics to screen patients and are
formulating a vaccination drive.
Oxford Economics said it only expects an exit from zero-COVID in the
second half of 2023, with vaccination rates for the elderly still
comparatively low.
"From an epidemiological and political perspective, we do not think
the country is ready yet to open up," it said in a Monday report.
(Reporting by Shanghai and Beijing newsrooms; Writing by Brenda Goh;
Editing by Tony Munroe, Lincoln Feast and Mike Harrison)
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