Millions of Chinese workers on the move ahead of Friday travel peak
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[January 18, 2023] By
Bernard Orr
BEIJING (Reuters) - Millions of urban workers were on the move across
China on Wednesday ahead of the expected Friday peak of its Lunar New
Year mass migration, as China's leaders looked to get its COVID-battered
economy moving.
Unfettered when officials last month ended three years of some of the
world's tightest COVID-19 restrictions, workers streamed into railway
stations and airports to head to smaller towns and rural homes, sparking
fears of a broadening virus outbreak.
Economists and analysts are scrutinising the holiday season, known as
the Spring Festival, for glimmers of rebounding consumption across the
world's second largest economy after new GDP data on Tuesday confirmed a
sharp economic slowdown in China.
Any protracted slowdown could worsen the policy challenges facing
President Xi Jinping, who must pacify a pessimistic younger generation
who took to the streets in November in historic protests against the
"zero-Covid" policy he was then championing.
While some analysts expect that recovery to be slow, China's
Vice-Premier Liu He declared to the World Economic Forum in Switzerland
on Tuesday that China was open to the world after three years of
pandemic isolation.
National Immigration Administration officials said that, on average,
half a million people had moved in or out of China per day since its
borders opened on Jan. 8, state media reported. That is expected to rise
to 600,000 a day once the holiday formally starts on Saturday.
But as workers flood out of megacities, such as Shanghai, where
officials say the virus has peaked, many are heading to towns and
villages where unvaccinated elderly have yet to be exposed to COVID and
health care systems are less equipped.
JOYOUS RETURNS FOR SOME
As the COVID surge intensified, some were putting the virus out of their
mind as they headed for the departure gates.
Travellers bustled through railway stations and subways in Beijing and
Shanghai, many ferrying large wheeled suitcases and boxes stuffed with
food and gifts.
"I used to be a little worried (about the COVID-19 epidemic)," said
migrant worker Jiang Zhiguang, waiting among the crowds at Shanghai's
Hongqiao Railway Station.
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People walk with their luggage at a
railway station during the annual Spring Festival travel rush ahead
of the Chinese Lunar New Year, as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
outbreak continues, in Shanghai, China January 16, 2023. REUTERS/Aly
Song
"Now it doesn't matter anymore. Now it's okay if you get infected.
You'll just be sick for two days only," Jiang, aged 30, told
Reuters.
Others will return to mourn relatives who have died. For some of
those, that bereavement is mixed with anger over what they say was a
lack of preparation to protect the vulnerable elderly before
officials jettisoned the COVID restrictions in early December.
The infection rate in the southern city of Guangzhou, capital of
China's most populous province, has now passed 85%, local health
officials announced on Wednesday.
In more isolated areas far from the swift urban outbreaks, state
medical workers are this week going door-to-door in some outlying
villages to vaccinate the elderly, with the official Xinhua news
agency describing the effort on Tuesday as the "last mile".
Clinics in rural villages and towns are now being fitted with
oxygenators, and medical vehicles have also been deployed to places
considered at risk.
While authorities confirmed on Saturday a huge increase in deaths -
announcing that nearly 60,000 people with COVID had died in
hospitals between Dec. 8 and Jan. 12 - state media reported that
heath officials were not yet ready to give the World Health
Organization (WHO) the extra data it is now seeking.
Specifically, the U.N. agency wants information on so-called excess
mortality - the number of all deaths beyond the norm during a
crisis, the WHO said in a statement to Reuters on Tuesday.
The Global Times, a tabloid published by the official People's
Daily, quoted Chinese experts saying the China Center for Disease
Control and Prevention was already monitoring such data, but it
would take time before it could be released.
Doctors in both public and private hospitals were being actively
discouraged from attributing deaths to COVID, Reuters reported on
Tuesday.
(Reporting By Bernard Orr in Beijing and Beijing and Shanghai
newsrooms; Additional reporting By Xihao Jiang in Shanghai; Writing
By Greg Torode; Editing by Michael Perry)
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