China halts air route as imported cases from S. Asia rise
Seventeen out of 19 new imported coronavirus cases registered on Saturday came from South Asia, Chinese health authorities said Sunday, a sharp spike which analysts said indicates that loosening restrictions and worsening contagion in the region poses a danger to China’s domestic situation.
The 17 patients were reported in South China’s Guangdong Province, with 14 flying from Bangladesh and three from India. Guangdong health commission on Sunday also reported four asymptomatic cases, three on the same flight from Bangladesh.
The 14 patients and the three asymptomatic carriers arrived in Guangzhou on China Southern Airlines flight CZ392 from Dhaka to Guangzhou on Thursday, which prompted the Chinese aviation regulator to suspend the route for four weeks from June 22 in accordance with the latest policy.
On June 4, the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) started easing restrictions on international flights. The policy came with a circuitbreaker mechanism states that if all passengers on one airline route test negative for three consecutive weeks, the airline will be permitted to add one more flight. If five passengers on a flight test positive, the responsible airline will have to halt operations for a week, and if 10 test positive, it must suspend operations for four weeks.
The suspension of the China Southern Airlines route to Dhaka is the first since the new policy came into effect.
Analysts noted that the increase in imported cases from South Asia indicates that the pandemic situation in the region poses risks for China’s domestic epidemic control, which is already strained due to a new outbreak centered on a food wholesale market in Beijing involving dozens of people. The World Health Organization has warned of the deteriorating situation in South Asia after countries in the region lifted or eased their lockdown measures. India, Pakistan and Bangladesh rank fourth, 15th and 18th on the list of countries with the most infections. But unlike many European countries, the curves in those South Asian countries are not flattening.
Zhao Gancheng, a research fellow at the Shanghai Institute for International Studies, told the Global Times on Sunday that China should get in front of the coronavirus threat from South Asia and tailor its measures in a timely manner to safeguard the efforts it has made to control the virus domestically, while maintaining the necessary ties.