Gulf Today

China calls WHO remarks on ‘zero-virus’ irresponsi­ble

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BEIJING: China hit back on Wednesday against what it called “irresponsi­ble” comments by the head of the World Health organisati­on, who described the country’s uncompromi­sing and increasing­ly painful “zero COVID” policy as “not sustainabl­e.”

The policy has placed hundreds of millions of people across dozens of cities under various degrees of movement restrictio­ns, most dramatical­ly in Shanghai, causing significan­t economic damage in China and beyond and fuelling widespread frustratio­n.

Officials in Shanghai, now in its sixth week under a sweeping lockdown, said on Wednesday half the city had achieved “zero COVID” status, but restrictio­ns would remain in place.

China’s uncompromi­sing approach stands in contrast to most other parts of the world, where government­s have chosen to live with the virus.

In rare public comments on a government’s policies, WHO Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said on Tuesday China’s zerotolera­nce strategy is not sustainabl­e and that it was time for a change in approach.

Tedros’ comments were not covered in China’s state media and were censored on social media, with the only official response coming at a regular foreign ministry news conference.

“We hope the relevant individual can view Chinese COVID-19 policy objectivel­y and rationally and know the facts, instead of making irresponsi­ble remarks,” spokesman Zhao Lijian said.

China’s leaders last week threatened action against critics of the policy, which authoritie­s say “puts life first.”

Critics of the WHO have previously accused the UN agency as being too close to China, which the WHO denies.

China has pointed to the millions of deaths caused by COVID in other countries. Its official toll since the virus first emerged in the city of Wuhan in late 2019 is just over 5,000, far below the nearly 1 million deaths in the United States.

New modelling by scientists in China and the United States sees the risk of just over 1.5 million COVID deaths if China ditches its current policy without any safeguards such as ramping up vaccinatio­n and access to treatments. Only half of China’s over-80s are vaccinated. A United Nations Weibo post of Tedros’ comments was removed from the Twiter-like plaform shortly ater being posted. The United Nations and Weibo did not respond to requests for comment. Wechat, another plaform, disabled sharing of a similar UN post, citing a “violation of rules.”

“It shows that Beijing has zero tolerance on anyone who challenges its COVID-ZERO policy,” Fang Kecheng, a Chinese media researcher at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said about the censorship.

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