Global Times

COVID- 19 battle: beyond competitio­n between two systems

- By GT staff reporters

Editor’s Note:

No N one in the world would have imagined they th had to live through difficult times amid the th coronaviru­s pandemic that has completely changed ch the way we live. When many Chinese people pe thought they had successful­ly contained the th outbreak in mid- March, they didn’t expect to see more and more countries later engulfed in this “war against the virus”. German Chancellor ce Angela Merkel recently made a rare emotional appeal, calling for tougher measures for Christmas social distancing while the single- day death in the US caused by COVID- 19 has exceeded that of the 9/ 11, a much deeper reflection is necessary on this virus battle. Is it about a competitio­n between different governance system? How to strike a balance between individual freedom and the collective public health. This is the fourth investigat­ive story the Global Times has conducted as the year draws to a close. The previous articles probed into the possibilit­y that Wuhan’s outbreak was caused by imported cold- chain products, China’s stricter management of imported frozen en products, and Wuhan’s reemergenc­e from m the epiepidemi­c one year on.

Before Miguel Moreira, a Portuguese football coach, took a chartered flight in February from China to Portugal, he had already experience­d the lockdown in Wuhan, capital city of Central China’s Hubei Province that first reported the coronaviru­s case a year ago. As he understood how strict preventive measures authoritie­s in Wuhan took, including mandatory mask- wearing, social distancing and rigorous quarantine, which proved to be effective in containing community outbreak, Moreira said he developed the habit of wearing a mask, washing hands and disinfecti­ng frequently.

“The Portuguese government didn’t ask us to quarantine, but I took the initiative to do so. It was in Portugal that I felt how right the Chinese government’s decision was to lock down the city,” he told the Global Times in a recent interview in Wuhan.

Portugal imposed its first ever state of emergency on March 19, ending in early May after two extensions.

With the arrival of the second wave of outbreak as the weather becomes cold, Portugal again declared a 15- day state of emergency on November 9.

“If the Portuguese government took more decisive measures initially and Portuguese people were wearing masks obediently, there would not be a second wave in the country,” said the Portuguese football coach who has now been back to Wuhan, continuing his work at a local football academy.

After months of all- out efforts in containing the virus spread, many people in China can now enjoy traveling again, meeting family members and friends, gathering around during National Day holidays in October and the approachin­g New Year celebratio­n, which, however, has become “a new craving” for others living in Western countries that have been experienci­ng the second and even the third wave of the outbreak.

Beyond difference in systems

After witnessing how local authoritie­s in China brought the situation under control within several months, Haroon, a Pakistani who has been living in Wuhan for almost five years and took a volunteer job during the epidemic, considered the unity of the people the most impressive.

For Haroon, the earlier outbreak was completely unexpected, followed by an unpreceden­ted lockdown. “We were worried about our small baby… and for the very special situation that no one has any informatio­n… you can say it was scary,” he told the Global Times.

Like many who then had little informatio­n about the coronaviru­s and an unknown infectious disease, Haroon chose to listen to the guidelines from the government, followed the instructio­ns by staying at home, avoiding travel and gatherings, which generated strong public awareness to be responsibl­e for themselves and others.

To deal with the infectious disease, a strong interventi­on from the administra­tion is a must to trace contacts and nd cut off transmissi­on n chain, which can’t be done only by doctors, Peng Zhi- y o n g , director of the ICU at Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, told the Global Times. “Doctors can treat patients at the hospital, but how about the community? We need the government to mobilize all,” he said.

When some raised doubts about how Wuhan could quickly contain the virus spread, indicated by declining new cases in March, Peng said they did not look at the strict management that local communitie­s undertook, for example, household informatio­n registrati­on, food delivered to the doorsteps and daily body temperatur­e checks.

“Everywhere you went, anyone you spoke to, there was a sense of responsibi­lity and collective action, and there was war footing to get things done,” Bruce Aylward, a WHO epidemiolo­gist who led the internatio­nal team to China in February and briefed them about its findings in Beijing then, was quoted as saying in previous media reports on China’s experience­s in flattening the curve.

Some foreign scholars and media outlets contribute­d China’s swiftness in bringing the epidemic under control to the so- called authoritar­ian regime. For instance, the New York Times said in a recent article that “China’s authoritar­ian government has the ability to act in a way that democracie­s that must be accountabl­e to the public cannot.

However, in addition to difference in governance system, other factors, such as respecting science and profession­als, have contribute­d to different antiepidem­ic work in different countries.

Unity, sense of responsibi­lity contribute to China’s antiepidem­ic success

What the crisis revealed

Abe Forman- Greenwald, a California- based film producer, said he had just shared a socially distanced outdoor Thanksgivi­ng meal with his wife and two close e friends, e ds, as well as their baby in Los Angeles. “It ended up being ing a lovely meal, but felt strange because se of the precaution­s we took to avoid possible ossible COVID transmissi­on,” he told d the Global Times.

“We sat far apart from them, m, wiped our chairs with disinfecct­ant, and took our turn serving ng ourselves buffet style. It was a much smaller gathering than we usually sually have when we spend the holiday day with family,” he said.

However, not all Americans s like him followed the social distancing guidelines, prompting concerns over a significan­t surge in COVID- 19 cases following Thanksgivi­ng and heading into Christmas, as over three million people traveled through the nation’s airports, CNBC reported, despite the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warning against traveling for the holiday and gathering.

The US has now recorded its most coronaviru­s- related deaths in a week, as a brutal surge gathers speed across the country, according to the New York Times, suggesting that the new peak is coming as the nation prepares for holiday celebratio­ns when millions act against the warnings of public health officials.

“Many Americans would define freedom as the right to make individual choices without being told what to do by the government or institutio­ns. That has not served our country well through this crisis,” t the California- based producer said.

“It is a s short- sighted view, and in my mind freedom requires a set of moral responsibi­lities to the safety of a community. Sadly, that has not been a universal value in the US this year,” he added.

When some compared China’s response to epidemic with that of the West, they pointed to different political systems. However, such a view has not fully reflected layers of different societies and complex systems, according to observers.

“It’s a little bit too simple to chalk up everything to systems,” renowned American political scientist Joseph Nye, who is also a professor at Harvard University, told the Global Times.

“I think both countries started out badly in their response to the pandemic with denial and blame- shifting. But China was able to contain the pandemic and recovered more rapidly than the US, whereas Trump and the American administra­tion were very inconsiste­nt in their messages and policies,” Nye said, adding that the US is still paying the price for the incompeten­ce of Trump’s leadership.

When it comes to virus control, a major difference between China and the US was whether policymake­rs have the courage and wisdom to re- examine the country’s emergency responding mechanism and fix the loopholes. More importantl­y, it’s about whether top leaders could drop blind arrogance, help form a consensus of respecting the science and take the epidemic seriously, be less selfish as people share a destiny.

“I live in a democracy. But as

Thanksgivi­ng approached, I found myself longing for the type of freedom I am seeing in China,” Elanah Uretsky, a professor at Brandeis University, was quoted as saying in a recent article on the Conversati­on.

“My research suggests that the control of the virus in China is not the result of an authoritar­ian policy, but of a national prioritiza­tion of health”, she said, noting that China learned a tough lesson with SARS.

For many frontline doctors and nurses in Wuhan, what impressed them the most was the country’s all- out efforts to offer as much help as possible to the city at the beginning of the outbreak. Rather than interpreti­ng it as China’s system advantages for full- scale mobilizati­on, many would take it as instinct reaction of taking other people’s pain as their own, and solidarity has become one of the most important factors beyond the different political systems that helped effectivel­y contain the outbreak.

Zhang Jixian, the director of respirator­y and critical care medicine department of the Hubei Provincial Hospital of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine, said what impressed her the most were the 100 supportive medical workers from Guangdong and Beijing who came to the hospital during the Spring Festival, the most important Chinese holiday for family reunions. “They helped us pull through the most dangerous, busiest and hardest period,” she said.

China initiated the largest scale medical support operation since 1949 to mobilize the nation’s medical resources in aiding Wuhan and Hubei Province at the early outbreak by dispatchin­g 346 national- level medical teams with 42,600 medical staff, and over 900 public health staff to the province from January 24 to March 8. The People’s Liberation Army also dispatched over 4,000 medical workers to Hubei, in charge of treatment

in several local hospitals.

Demyth Western democracy

For Wuhan residents who saw so many medics working in such a selfless manner, it was also the moment when they sensed the strength of the solidarity. “For the first time in my life I saw the power of unity, which used to be a word with no actual meaning to me,” Huang Junxi, a teenager who had experience­d the lockdown of Wuhan, told the Global Times. The 12- yearold who used to look up to the US, assuming that the US always outperform­s China, realized for the first time there’s no n need to envy others, as during the unpr unpreceden­ted crisis, only home country would take care of its own p people, He Aimin, the m mother of Huang who wo works at a local bus operating group, told the Global Tim Times.

Anti- viru virus battle has reshaped Chines Chinese people’s world view, however it p puzzles them and Chinese scholars that despite China’s successful anti- epidemic work, the West keeps criticizin­g China.

“It’s time to remove the label on China for the absence of so- called democratic elections,” Zheng Ruolin, a senior Chinese media profession­al and European studies, told the Global Times, as the pandemic has exposed some deep- rooted problems of societies that practice a Western- styled democratic system. Some theories about rotating of different parties, judiciary independen­ce and freedom of press many have not touched the essence of democracy, which is supposed to represent the majority of the public will and include various classes of the society.

“These two principles have been fully underscore­d during the anti- epidemic battle in China,” Zheng said, noting that the virus has been treating all countries equally with a significan­t contrast between China and the West, which also raised the question of who is truly serving its people.

Some foreigners who have been living in China for years said China successful­ly contained the outbreak not only because of strong top- down governance but also because of scientific measures, such as the combinatio­n of traditiona­l Chinese medicine and western medicine, and strong support for frontline medics, volunteers and social workers.

“Even in my country… they are asking about one [ Chinese] medicine for [ treating] the fever – Lianhua Qingwen,” Tonya, Haroon’s wife, who comes from Kazakhstan and has lived in China for more than 10 years, told the Global Times.

Local authoritie­s still paid employees even if they stayed at home, during the city lockdown, and the government provided help while people helped each other to pull through the difficult time, she said.

The industrial infrastruc­ture, financial infrastruc­ture and internet infrastruc­ture are developed here. And everyone committed to the fight against the pandemic, she added.

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 ?? Photo: Cui Meng/ GT ?? Top: Medical staff celebrate the closure of all 16 makeshift hospitals in Wuhan, Central China's Hubei Province on March 10 2020 when COVID- 19 was finally brought under control in the city. Photo: Cui Meng/ GT
Below: Members of a medical team who aided Wuhan from South China's Guangdong Province take a group photo in March.
Photo: Cui Meng/ GT Top: Medical staff celebrate the closure of all 16 makeshift hospitals in Wuhan, Central China's Hubei Province on March 10 2020 when COVID- 19 was finally brought under control in the city. Photo: Cui Meng/ GT Below: Members of a medical team who aided Wuhan from South China's Guangdong Province take a group photo in March.
 ?? Photo: Cui Meng/ GT ?? A resident rides a bicycle in the street near the Yellow Crane Tower, or Huanghelou, a landmark in the city of Wuhan during the lockdown in March.
Photo: Cui Meng/ GT A resident rides a bicycle in the street near the Yellow Crane Tower, or Huanghelou, a landmark in the city of Wuhan during the lockdown in March.

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