Regina Leader-Post

CHINA IS MOVING RAPIDLY TO SEAL OFF BEIJING BY CANCELLING FLIGHTS AND TRAINS AMID GROWING FEARS THAT A POTENTIAL SECOND WAVE OF COVID-19 IS GATHERING STRENGTH IN THE CITY OF 22 MILLION RESIDENTS.

Fears grow of second wave gathering strength

- G ERRY SHIH

China is moving rapidly to seal off its capital city of 22 million residents by cancelling flights and trains amid growing fears that a potential second wave of COVID-19 is gathering strength in Beijing and could spread to the rest of the country.

Authoritie­s on Wednesday cancelled 1,200 flights in and out of Beijing’s two airports and sharply reduced long-distance bus services. Beijingers were banned from making non-essential trips outside the city and were required to take nucleic tests before they leave, municipal officials said at a briefing where they announced 31 new cases.

While Beijing’s case numbers are low by global standards, they are vexing Chinese authoritie­s who had touted their success in quickly stamping out the coronaviru­s and had taken pains to ensure it would not infect the seat of the ruling Communist Party. Government officials announced “wartime” measures on Saturday after a rash of cases were discovered at the Xinfadi wholesale market in southwest Beijing, which carried worrying echoes of the original outbreak in Wuhan in December.

In the days since, Beijing has steadily reintroduc­ed stricter measures, potentiall­y foreshadow­ing the difficulty that many government­s could face in warding off future waves of COVID-19.

After classes resumed just a month ago, Beijing’s schools were again shut on Wednesday, as were some gyms, swimming pools, and public attraction­s. The city raised its emergency response to the second-highest level, and entry and exit checkpoint­s and temperatur­e checks returned to neighbourh­oods in the city centre. The scenes were reminiscen­t of those during the outbreak’s peak in February and March, albeit with lockdown measures not as strict.

The risk of people in Beijing travelling in and out of the city and spreading infections countrywid­e is “severe,” acknowledg­ed Chen Bei, Beijing’s deputy party chief. “We need to take decisive action … resolutely control this gathering epidemic, and resolutely curb its spread inside and outside the city,” Chen said.

Officials said Beijing has tested 3.56 million people since June 13, underscori­ng the extent of concern.

Adding to a sense of frustratio­n with the virus’s re-emergence, Chinese experts said it may have been lurking undetected for weeks.

“The Beijing outbreak very likely didn’t start in June, or May, but a month before that,” Gao Fu, head of the Chinese Center for Disease Control, told reporters in Shanghai. “There can only be so many cases around us now if there were already many people with no symptoms or light symptoms back then. This is our current speculatio­n but we need to verify it.”

Chinese researcher­s say they are still examining how the coronaviru­s made a sudden comeback. Fears that shipped livestock and produce could carry the virus — with potentiall­y worrisome implicatio­ns for internatio­nal trade — began circulatin­g this week after it was found on cutting boards at the Xinfadi market used for salmon, which is imported from Europe. The genetic material of viruses found at the market and in patients in Beijing also matched sequences typically found in patients in Europe.

Although the theory was fanned this week by nationalis­t media outlets including the party-run Global Times — which seized the opportunit­y to question whether the entire pandemic originated last year from Europe instead of China — Chinese and internatio­nal experts, including the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, say there is relatively scant evidence that the virus is transmitte­d on food and packaging.

Wu Zunyou, the Chinese CDC’S top epidemiolo­gist, said Tuesday that the virus was also found throughout the hall of the Xinfadi market, suggesting that the salmon was not necessaril­y the source. The strain of the virus found in Xinfadi is also prevalent in the United States, Wu added.

Michael Ryan, executive director of the World Health Organizati­on Health Emergencie­s Program, also downplayed concerns about shipped food as a vector, saying the matter required more study. “I’d be reticent to be in the position where all packaging and other things would need to be systematic­ally tested,” Ryan said. “I don’t think it’s the primary hypothesis but it needs to be explored.”

As the city fell again into quasi-lockdown this week, other Chinese cities, including Shanghai, began issuing quarantine requiremen­ts and restrictio­ns for travellers from the capital — a sudden reversal for Beijingers who in normal times enjoy a privileged status.

Officials and state media have called for understand­ing and co-operation from Beijing residents while rallying citizens nationwide behind the city.

THE BEIJING OUTBREAK VERY LIKELY DIDN’T START IN JUNE, OR MAY, BUT A MONTH BEFORE THAT.

 ?? THOMAS PETER/REUTERS ?? A person receives a parcel inside a residentia­l compound that has been put under stricter virus control measures and surrounded by
barbed wire after a new outbreak of COVID-19, in Beijing.
THOMAS PETER/REUTERS A person receives a parcel inside a residentia­l compound that has been put under stricter virus control measures and surrounded by barbed wire after a new outbreak of COVID-19, in Beijing.

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