Beijing Review

BUSTLING WITH ACTIVITY

The Chinese city hardest-hit by the pandemic reconnects with the outside world

- By Yuan Yuan

January 23, one day before the Chinese New Year’s Eve, the most important festival in China.

Two-way flow

tine, either at home or at a designated venue after they arrive at the destinatio­n.

Flavor of life

In downtown Wuhan, after being stranded at home for two months, residents can now go out.

“Grabbing a quick morning bite,” or guo zao, is the expression Wuhan residents use for “having breakfast.” Since Wuhan is an important transporta­tion hub in China with the Yangtze River passing through, people used to get up early to have breakfast at food stands.

Hot dry noodles, a type of boiled noodles with sesame sauce and pickles, is the iconic morning food in Wuhan.

“Normally we open two days after the Spring Festival. Now we are about two months late,” Lu Yanju, who is in charge of a branch of Cailinji, a time-honored restaurant chain in

Wuhan, told Thepaper.cn.

In February, to meet the strong demand for hot dry noodles, Cailinji launched group buying and delivered to local communitie­s. After the easing of the epidemic situation, the first branch of Cailinji resumed business on March 23. Lu’s branch reopened on March 26.

The number of orders surprised Lu. On the first day, Lu prepared noodles for 100 orders, and they were sold out by 9 a.m. Now, they can fill 400 orders each day. Even though the eatery can only provide takeaway service, customers still choose to patronize it, with some eager ones eating on the street right after buying the noodles. “People not only miss the taste of the noodles but also the aroma of breakfast wafting on the street,” Lu said. “The sight of eaters on the street makes me feel the city is finally coming back to life.”

Long Tao, a 54-year-old teacher in a kindergart­en in Wuhan, is busy exercising at home to lose the weight she gained during this long break. “I gained 5 kg,” Long said. “I must be in good shape to get back to work.”

Long used to take part in square dancing to stay fit and it is the exercise she missed most while trapped at home. Now the dancing groups are returning too. “The only difference is that we must put on masks,” Long said.

In the downtown, most of the shopping malls are already open. Even though the date for reopening schools has not been decided and people must show the health codes and have their temperatur­e checked while entering residentia­l compounds, parks and many public areas, the city has largely come to life.

Back to work

On April 7, the No.7 Jianghan Bridge in Wuhan resumed constructi­on after a two

month suspension, making it the first bridge project to be restarted in the city.

The constructi­on workers had undergone mandatory quarantine for 14 days before getting back to work on site. They are required to report their health condition via Wechat every day. The company has prepared virus-prevention materials including masks and disinfecta­nts for disease prevention.

“The constructi­on was halted, but we are confident we will make up for the delays,” Mei Jiansong, who is in charge of the project on site, told Xinhua News Agency.

With the novel coronaviru­s epidemic effectivel­y contained in Wuhan, the local epidemic prevention and control authority in the city has asked enterprise­s undertakin­g major projects to resume operation.

At a news briefing on April 5, Hu Yabo,

Executive Vice Mayor of Wuhan, said major automobile and electronic product manufactur­ers have all resumed production, including China’s tech giant Huawei and Foxconn, a key supplier for Apple.

Hu also said that the government will draft tailor-made plans to help companies deal with difficulti­es in funding, logistics and transporta­tion of workers. By April 4, about 76 percent of projects with investment of over 100 million yuan ($14.3 million) had been put back on track. “So far, not a single case of infection has been reported from workplaces,” Hu said.

With more businesses and major projects being resumed, Hu said, the city will give great importance to epidemic control at workplaces to ensure the virus does not spread again.

Official statistics show that on April 7, there were 181 severe cases in Wuhan. On April 8, this number decreased to 135.

“Most of the remaining severe cases have tested negative for the novel coronaviru­s,” Jiang Li, a doctor from Beijing Xuanwu Hospital who is now in the Jinyintan Hospital in Wuhan, told Caixin magazine. “Now we are focusing more on treating the complicati­ons and other chronic diseases of these patients.”

“China is facing rising pressure of imported COVID-19 cases,” Zhang Wenhong, Director of the Infectious Diseases Department of the Shanghai Huashan Hospital, told China Central Television. “Vigilance is still highly needed to prevent the disease from going viral again.”

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 ??  ?? Passengers get off the G4802 train at the Beijing West Railway Station on April 8. It is the first train that arrived from Wuhan to Beijing since Wuhan lifted outbound travel restrictio­ns
Passengers get off the G4802 train at the Beijing West Railway Station on April 8. It is the first train that arrived from Wuhan to Beijing since Wuhan lifted outbound travel restrictio­ns

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