Gulf Today

Desperatio­n as no end in sight to Shanghai lockdown

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SHANGHAI: Scuffles with officials, workers storming factory gates and households raging at being dragged into quarantine — Shanghai’s long fight against COVID-19 is unravellin­g into chaos and desperatio­n.

China insists on sticking to its “zero-covid” strategy, and that has let most of Shanghai’s 25 million residents locked down for several weeks.

The city is the epicentre of China’s worst COVID-19 outbreak to date, with more than half a million infections and over 500 deaths, according to official figures.

Yet despite cases dwindling into the low thousands in recent days, authoritie­s are still conjuring new control measures.

Those include relocating entire residentia­l compounds to quarantine — even including people with negative virus tests — and denying some food deliveries in a bid to stop the spread of the virus.

Residents who were initially told they would be at home for a just few days are now entering their sixth or seventh week of lockdown and anger is boiling over across the city.

Images emerged over the weekend of a street fight between locals and officials clad in white hazmat suits in Shanghai’s Minhang district.

District officials later said “troublemak­ers” clashed with health management staff on Saturday night, inciting neighbours to rush out of their barricaded building as other residents threw objects onto the street from their windows.

Videos circulatin­g on social media and verified by AFP showed people in Minhang’s Zhuanqiao neighbourh­ood pushing police as chants against “violent law enforcemen­t” echoed around.

Workers at Apple supplier Quanta’s Shanghai factory fought with guards and broke through barricades last week over fears that COVID-19 rules on the campus could get stricter, according to Bloomberg.

The flashpoint­s add to a catalogue of protests since the early-april start of lockdown.

Shanghai officials claim the city is winning its COVID-19 fight, declaring in past weeks that millions have been released from the strictest levels of lockdown.

But the view from the ground is different. Large neighbourh­oods given a brief semblance of freedom have quietly been put back into lockdown, Shanghai residents told reporters.

Many who were placed in low-risk areas have been told that they cannot leave their apartments except to get COVID-19 tests.

Compounds are ordering “silent periods” or curfews of as long as seven days during which people are forbidden to even order deliveries of personal items, according to official notices.

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