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Sweeping Lockdowns As China Battles Covid Before Olympics

Authorities are trying to curb outbreaks in several provinces with officials in Beijing restricting access to tourist sites and advising residents not to leave the city unless necessary


China covid
China has approved Pfizer's Paxlovid and Brii Biosciences's antibody-based medicine for mild and moderate Covid patients with high risk of progressing to severe conditions. Photo: CNSphoto via Reuters.

 

Tens of thousands of people in northern China were under strict stay-at-home orders on Monday as authorities sought to stamp out a growing Covid outbreak in the run-up to the Beijing Winter Olympics.

Bus services were suspended in some areas, while people in other parts of the north were bracing for more lockdowns and curbs.

Officials in the Chinese capital restricted access to tourist sites and advised residents not to leave the city unless necessary, although regular transport services continued as normal.

China reported 39 new cases on Monday, bringing the tally from the latest Delta variant-linked outbreak to more than 100 cases over the past week.

The numbers are low compared with most places in the world, but China has pursued a zero-case strategy throughout the pandemic and authorities are determined to subdue the latest outbreak with the Winter Olympics just over 100 days away.

Several housing blocks in Beijing have been locked down, and organisers on Sunday indefinitely postponed a marathon at which 30,000 runners were expected.

Some 23,000 residents in one housing compound in Changping district have been ordered to stay indoors after nine cases were found there in recent days, local outlet Beijing News reported.

Photos showed officials in hazmat suits standing watch outside the entrances to each apartment block, and the perimeter of the compound blocked by metal barricades.

Entry will be restricted for people who have been to places with local Covid-19 infections in the last 14 days, Beijing’s vice-publicity minister said on Monday.

Speaking at a press briefing, Xu Hejian added that people who come to the capital from affected areas must show a negative test and undergo two weeks of health monitoring.

Authorities are also restricting parks, scenic areas, cinemas, museums and other indoor venues to 75% capacity, and have closed mahjong rooms, he said.

In recent days, officials have advised people to avoid large gatherings and “unnecessary” travel out of the capital.

 

Mass testing, Criminal Probes

Northern China has accounted for the majority of recent cases, with mass testing under way in 11 provinces.

A stay-at-home lockdown started on Monday for around 35,000 people – including tourists – in the Inner Mongolia region’s Ejin county.

Health officials have warned that more infections may emerge as testing is ramped up in the coming days to fight the outbreak, which has been linked to a group of domestic tourists that travelled across China.

Authorities on Sunday suspended inter-provincial tour groups in five areas where cases have been detected, including Beijing.

In a sign of how seriously Beijing is taking the outbreak, police in the city have launched three criminal investigations into alleged Covid safety breaches, the deputy director of the city’s public security bureau said on Sunday.

These included two infected people who initially concealed their symptoms, two residents escaping lockdown by climbing over a fence – plus a pair of pharmacy managers who sold cough and fever medicine in breach of Covid requirements.

China requires registration for anyone buying cold or flu medicine in case they later turn out to have the virus.

 

Buses and Taxis Suspended

Some cities, including Gansu’s provincial capital Lanzhou, and parts of Inner Mongolia have already suspended bus and taxi services and closed tourist sites.

In the central city of Wuhan – where the coronavirus was first identified in late 2019 – organisers abruptly cancelled another marathon on Sunday that was expected to draw 26,000 participants.

Officials in Alxa Left Banner, a small division in Inner Mongolia, said last Wednesday they had imposed a lockdown and would test its population of 180,000, after the city of Erenhot and a division called Ejina Banner barred people from leaving amid local outbreaks.

 

• AFP with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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China’s Factories and Retailers Suffer Covid, Supply Disruptions Slump

China Economy Loses Momentum as Factory Output, Retail Sales Disappoint

 

 

 

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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