Gulf Today

Expats flee as Shanghai’s COVID lockdown drags

- Engen Tham and Xie Yu, Reuters

Shanghai’s heavy-handed COVID-19 lockdown is driving scores of foreign residents to flee the commercial centre, denting the appeal of mainland China’s most cosmopolit­an city and prompting others to rethink their futures in the metropolis. While no official statistics are available for departures in recent weeks, pet movers, property agents and law firms say they are seeing a sharp uptick in departure queries, while online chat groups swapping advice on how to leave the city amid lockdown curbs have swelled.

“Normally we get about 30-40 cases a month but we got over 60 in April,” said Michael Faung, founder of internatio­nal pet movers Shanghai M&D pet.

The city of 25 million is the China base for numerous multinatio­nal firms and long a magnet for expats lured by the internatio­nal vibe of areas such as the French Concession, where boutiques and cafes line tree-shaded lanes.

But China has seen a steady drain in foreigners since the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan and subsequent entry restrictio­ns have slowed new entrants to a trickle.

Shanghai was officially home to 164,000 foreign residents last year. That compares to 215,000 work visa holders in 2018, according to government data, which did not count their dependents.

The last straw for many has been the monthlong lockdown, 10 foreign residents told Reuters, describing how they had difficulti­es obtaining food and fears of being separated from family members should they be infected with COVID.

“Until the lockdown I really couldn’t feel the authoritar­ian government, because you’re more or less free to do what you want and I never really lived oppressed,” said Jennifer Li, a foreigner who is making plans for her family to leave the city that has been their home for 11 years.

The handling of COVID “made us realise how human lives and human mental health is not important to this government,” she added.

The Shanghai government did not respond to a request for comment. China says it must stick with its zero-tolerance approach given the danger the Omicron variant posed to people with underlying health conditions, the elderly and unvaccinat­ed.

Foreign business chambers have warned of foreign talent flight.

The “number of foreigners in China have halved since pandemic began and could halve again this summer,” said Joerg Wutke, president of the EUROPEAN Chamber of Commerce at a recent forum.

“EUROPEANS, including the Brits, will not even fill the Beijing Bird’s nest stadium, a capacity of 80,000,” Wutke added.

British internatio­nal school Wellington College Internatio­nal Shanghai, which charges up to 348,000 yuan ($53,270) a year, sent a leter to parents on April 15 noting that some of its teachers wanted to return home.

It also said it understood that some families were reconsider­ing their future in Shangahi and extended a deadline for parents to withdraw their children from the school, according to a copy of the leter seen by Reuters.

Wellington College did not respond to a request for comment.

An April American Chamber of Commerce survey found 44.3% of respondent­s said they would lose expatriate staff if the current COVID restrictio­ns remain in place for the next year.

Shanghai’s curbs were initally set to last only five days but have stretched into their fourth week with litle clarity on when they may lit. Some of those who managed to leave describe harrowing efforts to reach the airport, from paying $500 for a cab that usually costs $30, batling neighbourh­ood workers who block departures, to being stranded at the airport ater their flights were abruptly cancelled.

One described how she and her five-month old daughter spent nearly a week sleeping on the floor of Pudong Airport, running out of food, when issues with documentat­ion for her baby meant she couldn’t board her flight. The lockdown has shutered visa offices and many administra­tive firms in the city.

The woman does not plan on returning to Shanghai, declining to give her name due to privacy reasons.

“With what I have faced, let me just go back to my country and do something there,” she said.

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