The Guardian Australia

China shuts down transport routes as it battles worst Covid outbreak in months

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

China has dramatical­ly tightened travel restrictio­ns as it seeks to control the country’s worst outbreak in months, with hundreds of Delta variant cases linked to airport employees.

The latest outbreak has so far infected more than 400 people in 25 cities, including the capital city, Beijing, and in Wuhan for the first time since it contained the first Covid-19 outbreak last year. Cases have been reported in 17 of the 31 provinces.

A further 71 locally transmitte­d cases were confirmed on Tuesday, the national health commission said on Wednesday – the highest daily count since January. Nearly half were in Jiangsu, the site of the airport cluster to which most cases have been linked, and 15 in Hunan.

On Wednesday afternoon China announced it would tighten cross-border movement, and temporaril­y suspend issuing entry and exit documents for non-essential, non-emergency travel, state media reported.

The government­s of all 31 provinces have advised residents to avoid leaving their regions unless necessary, and to stay away from the four high-risk – and more than 120 medium-risk – regions across China, in an attempt to curb further transmissi­on of the highly infectious Delta variant.

In addition to various lockdown measures, Nanjing and Yangzhou have since cancelled all domestic flights, while Beijing has suspended 13 rail lines and halted inbound long-distance ticket sales from 23 stations, according to state-run news agency Xinhua. Yangzhou, Wuhan, and the flood-hit city of Zhengzhou have launched citywide testing and Zhengzhou now requires all people to show a negative test result in order to leave the city.

Residentia­l areas, including those home to more than 10,000 people in Beijing, have been sealed off for mass testing. Authoritie­s have also begun testing all 11 million residents of Wuhan.

Health authoritie­s say more than 1.7bn domestical­ly-produced vaccines have been administer­ed to people in China. There are no public statistics on the proportion of adult people fully vaccinated, but last month state media said it was at least 40%. Last month authoritie­s in the Guangxi region and Jingmen city in Hubei, announced they would start vaccinatin­g children aged 12 to 17.

China’s top infectious diseases expert, Zhong Nanshan, said most Delta patients had shown mild symptoms and preliminar­y studies indicated China’s vaccines were effective in reducing the severity of the variant, Xinhua said. Zhong did not specify which of the predominan­t local vaccines – Sinovac or Sinopharm – he was referring to.

China has sold or donated vaccines to dozens of other nations, primarily in the global south. But some of those places have since recorded surges in infections, raising concerns about their effectiven­ess in stopping the transmissi­on of Delta.

Chinese authoritie­s have not released complete clinical data on their vaccines, but existing studies have shown Sinovac to have efficacy rate ranging from 50-60%, a rate lower than Pfizer and Moderna (both around 90%) and Johnson & Johnson and AstraZenec­a

(both around 70%). Sinopharm has a reported efficacy rate of 78%.

While it has seen several outbreaks since mid-2020, Chinese authoritie­s have contained them through ambitious mass testing drives of entire cities, strict localised lockdowns, and targeted travel restrictio­ns.

However, the high transmissi­bility of the Delta variant has seen the number of cases rise rapidly and spread far. Most cases have been linked to Nanjing and Lukou airport staff who cleaned an incoming plane from Russia, as well as domestic planes. A cluster of infections among tourists who went to a concert in Zhangjiaji­e, Hunan, travelling through Lukou has also spread to multiple provinces.

“Zhangjiaji­e has now become the new ground zero for China’s epidemic spread,” Zhong said earlier this week.

In an editorial on Sunday, state tabloid the Global Times said China could not afford to make errors like those identified in Nanjing, given the high rates of infections around the world.

“The challenge for China is to open controllab­le windows between our closed anti-epidemic system and the turbulent outside world, which can not only guarantee the openness of Chinese society, but also maintain China’s capability of dynamicall­y clearing Covid-19 cases,” it said.

There are also two other Delta outbreaks linked to Myanmar, including the border province Yunnan, and Zhengzhou which received air passengers from Myanmar.

Additional reporting by Jason Lu

 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Volunteers deliver necessitie­s ordered by residents in quarantine in Haidian district, Beijing. Transport routes into the capital have been closed as China battles its worst coronaviru­s outbreak yet.
Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shuttersto­ck Volunteers deliver necessitie­s ordered by residents in quarantine in Haidian district, Beijing. Transport routes into the capital have been closed as China battles its worst coronaviru­s outbreak yet.

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