Beijing Review

SHARED ANSWERS FOR SHARED PROBLEMS

Renewed calls for global efforts to contain COVID-19 pandemic

- By Wen Qing

It signaled the rescue medical teams could finally leave one by one and the first batch departed on March 17.

But though the situation is under control in China, the disease has become a pandemic, erupting in 159 countries and regions, from Europe to the Middle East to Africa. By March 18, 35 countries had declared a state of emergency, heightenin­g the need for the internatio­nal community to work together to defeat the disease.

A shared community

tries did not take the threat seriously.

Discussing how COVID-19 could ravage Italy, Michele Geraci, former Under Secretary of State at the Ministry of Economic Developmen­t, said the government did not pay enough attention to the virus in the early days. Although schools and businesses were shut down, people still moved freely in towns.

Maria Rita Gismondo, a leading researcher, went public saying COVID-19 was not to be feared since the seasonal flu had killed more people in Italy in 2020. All these confusing signals made people lower their guard.

Italy and even the EU had not been strict enough and were slow to act, Geraci told Guangzhou Daily.

Spain and France also have been among the worst-hit in Europe. Many people disregarde­d the warnings about avoiding mass gatherings.

For example, on March 3, thousands of French people took to the streets to protest the pension reform plan. On March 8, thousands of women in Spain and France marched in Internatio­nal Women’s Day rallies.

A week later, Spain announced a twoweek state of emergency, a lockdown similar to Italy’s, after reporting 1,500 new coronaviru­s cases in a day. Shortly after Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s decree to that effect, his wife Begoña Gómez tested positive for COVID-19.

In the Middle East, where Iran is the most severely affected, long conflicts and political turmoil have generally weakened the medical systems. Besides, according to Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani, U.S. sanctions, which target medical and laboratory supplies to Iran, are hampering Iran’s efforts to control COVID-19.

The Chinese Government has sent medical supplies to Pakistan, Laos, Thailand, Iran, the Republic of Korea, Japan and the African Union, Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Geng Shuang said at a press briefing on March 18. Besides, it has donated $20 million to the WHO for assisting other countries. Local government­s in China have also donated masks, protective clothing, test kits and other medical supplies to their sister cities in foreign countries.

In addition, China has shared its medical knowhow. Its healthcare profession­als have gone to Iran, Iraq, Italy and other countries, lending their expertise. The sharing has been widened through video conference­s with more countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons.

For instance, on March 18, Chinese experts took part in an online video conference attended by nearly 300 African officials and specialist­s. The experts detailed the trend of the pandemic, its features and the Chinese practices for disease control and treatment.

The Chinese corporate sector has also responded. The Jack Ma Foundation, the charitable organizati­on of Ma, founder of the e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, sent 500,000 test kits and 1 million masks to the U.S. It also donated medical supplies to Japan, the Republic of Korea, Italy, Iran, Spain and African countries.

Besides, the foundation has compiled a handbook from doctors’ experience in treating COVID-19 patients. “As most regions in the world will face challenges, I hope this practical experience could be shared among all medical workers to make them prepared,” Ma wrote on his Chinese social media account.

The Sany Group, a constructi­on and mining equipment manufactur­er based in Changsha, Hunan Province, with a worldwide presence, sent 50,000 face masks to Germany on March 13. On each box there was a note quoting a German proverb, “Mountain and valley never come together, but people do.”

According to Sun Yongfu, a senior researcher with the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a Chinese think tank, the measures taken by China to combat COVID-19 cannot be replicated in other countries as their national conditions are different. “But prevention and treatment experience could be shared,” he said. Also, “countries should enhance cooperatio­n in joint scientific research on vaccines, test kits and treatment plans.”

POST-COVID-19 scenario

Once the epidemic is controlled in other regions, the next lesson that China has learned is to keep the guard up still. The risk is of imported cases. In China, as many Chinese who were studying or working abroad are returning home, there is a rising danger of infections coming from outside the country.

On March 18, Beijing confirmed 11 new cases—all of the people had come from abroad.

The authoritie­s also have to deal with the fact that some ill travelers may try to conceal their health conditions.

Rather than closing exits and entries, the local government­s in China have initiated other measures. The Beijing Capital

Internatio­nal Airport has opened a special area to receive passengers from countries affected by COVID-19. The Beijing Municipal Government has enforced a 14-day quarantine on all internatio­nal travelers entering Beijing, which is now followed by many other local government­s.

While continuing epidemic control, the government is supporting factories and offices to resume work, another important measure to steer the country to normalcy.

“The resumption rate of leading industrial enterprise­s is increasing,” Meng Wei, a National Developmen­t and Reform Commission spokespers­on, said at a press conference on March 17. “In most provinces, it has exceeded 90 percent. In Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Guangdong provinces as well as Shanghai and Chongqing municipali­ties, it is approximat­ely 100 percent,” Meng said.

At Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronic­s maker, for example, production has “exceeded expectatio­ns,” according to its founder Terry Guo, and supplies to its factories have returned to normal. This Apple-supplier has over 40 branches on the Chinese mainland. Foxconn said on March 18 that the first batch of workers had returned to its Wuhan branch.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Workers load medical supplies donated for Italy at the Zhejiang Provincial People’s Hospital in Hangzhou on March 17
Workers load medical supplies donated for Italy at the Zhejiang Provincial People’s Hospital in Hangzhou on March 17
 ??  ?? An empty Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, a landmark shopping arcade in Milan, Italy, on March 10
An empty Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, a landmark shopping arcade in Milan, Italy, on March 10
 ??  ?? An electronic screen provides informatio­n about the novel coronaviru­s at a subway station in São Paulo, Brazil, on March 11
An electronic screen provides informatio­n about the novel coronaviru­s at a subway station in São Paulo, Brazil, on March 11

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China