Gulf Today

Virus cases fall in Shanghai; South Korea eases mask rules

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The COVID-19 outbreak that has shut down most of Shanghai appears to be waning, with the number of new cases falling below 10,000 a day over the weekend.

Meanwhile, South Korea has loosened rules requiring masks to be worn outdoors as COVID-19 cases drop, but many people are not taking them off yet due to pervasive Omicron infections.

Health authoritie­s lited the mandate on Monday in the latest step to relax distancing curbs, even amid opposition from the transition team of President-elect Yoon Suk-yeol which has called the decision premature.

Chinese authoritie­s have begun a limited easing of a citywide lockdown that has disrupted the lives of millions of residents and dealt at least a temporary blow to China’s economy. Many have been confined to their apartments for three weeks or more. They reported difficulty ordering food deliveries in the early days of the lockdown and higher prices for what they could get.

China’s largest city recorded about 7,000 cases a day on Saturday and Sunday, down from a peak of 27,605 nearly three weeks ago

China’s largest city recorded about 7,000 cases a day on Saturday and Sunday, down from a peak of 27,605 nearly 3 weeks ago on April 13; South Korea drops rules requiring masks to be worn outdoors

on April 13. Shanghai reported 32 deaths, raising the death toll to 454. Most of the victims have been elderly and many were unvaccinat­ed.

Even as many other countries relax pandemic restrictio­ns, the Chinese government has stuck to a “ZERO-COVID” approach that restricts travel, mass tests entire cities and sets up sprawling temporary facilities to try to isolate every infected person.

Lockdowns start with buildings and neighborho­ods but become citywide if the virus is spreading widely.

Many outside experts say it’s time for China to change course. Lockdowns helped buy critical time at the start of the pandemic but ZERO-COVID no longer makes sense from a public health perspectiv­e and imposes socioecono­mic costs, said Richard Reithinger, the vice president for global health at RTI Internatio­nal in Washington.

“Continuing to enforce a ZERO-COVID-19 policy now, including a lockdown approach and restrictin­g travel, is almost like pretending we have learned nothing over the past two years, now that effective treatment options and various vaccines are available,” he said. But Chinese officials worry that a major outbreak could overwhelm the health care system and lead to more deaths, particular­ly among the unvaccinat­ed elderly.

Authoritie­s in Beijing have closed schools, carried out mass testing of more than 20 million people and imposed targeted lockdowns of buildings and neighbourh­oods to try to prevent what is still a small outbreak from reaching Shanghai proportion­s and necessitat­ing a citywide lockdown.

The Chinese capital reported 50 new cases, bringing the total to 400 in the 11-day-old outbreak. Restaurant­s and gyms have been ordered shut for the May Day national holiday that runs through Wednesday. Major tourist sites in the city, including the Forbidden City and the Beijing Zoo, will close their indoor exhibition halls starting on Tuesday.

Shanghai has recorded about 400,000 cases in China’s largest outbreak since the start of the pandemic.

Reithinger said a ZERO-COVID policy is a blanket strategy rather than one driven by epidemiolo­gical data. Rather than citywide lockdowns, China should focus on areas where there are clusters of cases, enforce social distancing and other prevention measures and redouble its vaccinatio­n efforts, particular­ly among the elderly, he said.

In South Korea, most people were seen wearing masks on the bustling streets in Gwanghwamu­n district, where government and corporate buildings are located, saying the protection makes them feel more at ease.

“I tried taking it off when I let home but then 70-80% of people I saw downtown were wearing it. I guess it’s too early to get rid of it even when we’re outside,” Lee Byung-young, 61, told reporters.

Kim Eun-hee, 52, said she would feel safer without a mask if daily infections fall further to about 5,000. The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) reported 20,084 new COVID-19 cases for Sunday, with daily cases continuing to drop from a peak of more than 620,000 in mid-march.

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A worker is tested for the coronaviru­s on a street in Shanghai on Monday.
Reuters ↑ A worker is tested for the coronaviru­s on a street in Shanghai on Monday.

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