Beijing returns to work after 5-day break on high alert for COVID

AFP

Beijing returned to work on Thursday after a five-day Labour Day holiday with China's capital on high COVID alert as it tries to eradicate an outbreak it has managed to limit to dozens of new cases a day for about two weeks.

Authorities in Beijing are determined to avoid the fate of China's commercial hub of Shanghai, where most of its 25 million people have endured more than a month of increasingly frustrating confinement to their residential compounds.

The capital's streets were slightly less busy than on a normal working day as authorities have encouraged people to work from home and the closure of scores of bus routes and more than 10 per cent of subway stations as part of COVID precautions has complicated commuting.

Transport officials have also asked ride-hailing platforms to reduce activity in some parts of the city.

Still, many subway trains looked crowded and office districts were busy. Many people took to bicycles to get around.

Under a host of new curbs in recent days, Beijing residents hoping to take the subway or bus have to have a negative COVID test but it appeared that few checks were being made.

Beijing was doing better two weeks into its outbreak than Shanghai did at that point, when daily cases were in the hundreds and rising.

The apparent success in keeping a lid on the outbreak has enabled authorities to make small adjustments to restrictions.

Some small parts of Chaoyang district, the epicentre of Beijing's outbreak, which had put restrictions on movement, allowed people to go to work on Thursday though they were encouraged to work from home if possible and avoid gatherings.

Some isolated lockdowns of residential buildings and the closure of gyms, restaurants and other venues remained in force.

In Shanghai, while authorities say curbs on movement have been gradually eased in recent days in more areas, there was no significant change for many people living in communities under lockdown.

RETURNING TO NORMAL?

China's uncompromising "zero-COVID" policy looks increasingly bizarre to an outside world that is easing curbs or lifting them altogether in a bid to live with a disease that authorities in those places have concluded can never be eradicated.

China argues its policy is saving lives, which makes the heavy economic and psychological costs of the lockdowns worth it.

Officials point to millions of COVID deaths outside China while its official death toll since the virus emerged in the central city of Wuhan in late 2019 is just over 5,000.

Vice-premier Sun Chunlan said in Shanghai on Sunday that communities with no new cases for seven days should be allowed to return to "normal social order".

Yet often seemingly arbitrary enforcement of rules is a source of anguish for Shanghai residents.

In some communities, people enforcing the rules only allow one member of each household out for a few hours a day.

Elsewhere, no one is allowed out even though the community's risk level has been officially downgraded.

The enforcers deny being told they can relax the rules and residents struggle to identify who exactly has the authority to ease them.

In some districts, buildings are assigned stars according to when their last COVID cases were recorded with the top rank of five stars indicating no new cases for at least two months.

More from International News

  • Netanyahu says Israel to decide which international forces in Gaza acceptable

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday Israel would determine which foreign forces it would allow as part of a planned international force in Gaza to help secure an end to its war under US President Donald Trump's plan.

  • Two suspects in Louvre jewel heist case arrested in Paris

    Two suspects in the brazen daylight heist of some of France's crown jewels from the Louvre were arrested in Paris on Saturday evening and are being questioned, Le Parisien newspaper reported on Sunday, citing sources close to the investigation.

  • Russian attack on Kyiv kills three, injures 31

    Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called for new strong sanctions against Russia and its allies after Russian drones killed three and injured 31, including six children, in an overnight air attack on Kyiv.

  • PKK announces withdrawal from Turkey

    The outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) said on Sunday it was withdrawing from Turkey as part of a disarmament process it is coordinating with the government, and pressed Ankara for concrete measures to move the process along.

Blogs