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Covid Lockdown Extended for 16m in China’s Chengdu City

The misery continues in the southwestern city, where residents have endured a two-month-long heatwave, an earthquake on Monday, and now an extended Covid lockdown


Officials extended the Covid lockdown in Chengdu in southwest China on Thursday.
Workers in protective suits prepare to deliver food supplies to a residential compound in Chengdu amid the Covid lockdown, Sichuan province, Sept 2, 2022; CNSphoto via Reuters.

 

The Chinese city of Chengdu extended a lockdown for 16 million of its 21 million residents on Thursday, while officials in at least 40 other cities continue to conduct Covid testing and close monitoring of local citizens’ health.

China reported 1,439 infections for Wednesday September 7, which was down from 1,695 cases on Tuesday, the National Health Commission said on Thursday.

Chengdu has recently battled heatwaves, power cuts and a deadly earthquake in mountainous areas to the south on Monday that killed 82 people and injured nearly 300 more.

The city, which is the capital of the southwestern province of Sichuan, was locked down on September 1 after Covid cases were detected. That made it the largest Chinese metropolis to be hit with curbs since Shanghai earlier in the year.

Since then, Chengdu has mostly been reporting fewer than 200 new infections a day – small numbers compared with outbreaks in other parts of the world. It found 116 new cases for September 7 versus 121 the day earlier, authorities said on Thursday.

The lockdown was expected to be lifted on Wednesday but officials said late in the day the virus still posed a risk in some areas.

Residents in locked-down areas will be tested every day and those who test positive will be quarantined. Residents in areas deemed high-risk are not allowed out of their homes.

Chengdu is aiming for zero new community infections within a week, its Covid prevention and control command said in a statement.

A handful of districts were released from full lockdown but residents there still have to undergo mass testing on Friday and Sunday.

Residents in districts no longer under full lockdown are barred from going to other districts and are discouraged from leaving Chengdu for non-essential reasons.

The policies would be “dynamically adjusted according to the development of the epidemic”, the Covid prevention office said.

 

ALSO SEE: Chinese Cities Urging Citizens Not to Travel on Long Weekend

 

 

China Stocks Edge Down

China has been battling to contain the highly transmissible Omicron variant, imposing various degrees of lockdowns to stop its spread. Shanghai was locked down in April and May. Other big cities that have endured lockdowns and restrictions include Xian and Shenzhen.

Japanese brokerage and investment bank Nomura said that as of Tuesday, 49 Chinese cities had various levels of lockdowns or control measures, with an estimated 291.7 million people affected, up from 161.3 million the previous week.

Those people accounted for 20.7% of China‘s population and come from areas that contribute 24.5% of its gross domestic product, Nomura said.

Chinese stocks edged lower on Thursday, defying a rally in other Asian markets, as Covid clouded the economic outlook.

The flare-ups come in a year when President Xi Jinping is widely expected to secure a precedent-breaking third term as leader at a once-in-five-years congress of the ruling Communist Party in mid-October.

In the run-up to the congress and also to the week-long National Day holidays at the beginning of October, more and more cities have been urging residents to refrain from non-essential trips in view of the Covid outbreaks, which have been reported in every region and province in recent weeks.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

ALSO SEE:

China’s Covid Restrictions Affect 49 Cities, Shanghai Forum Off

 

China’s Trade Loses Momentum as Global Demand Drops

 

China Banks Face Profit Squeeze From Covid, Property Crisis

 

Chips Banned by US in Big Demand from Chinese Researchers

 

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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