Global Times

Beijing fortified to cut infection from Hebei

▶ Inbound travel control strictest since Xinfadi market surge in June

- By GT staff reporters

Meticulous checks at highways, lockdown of villages, encouragin­g work from home … these are part of the measures taken by Beijing, as China’s political center and transporta­tion hub is building what is like an “invisible wall” to ward off coronaviru­s onslaught from neighborin­g Hebei Province for the safety of the upcoming Spring Festival and planned two sessions meetings.

Five cases were reported on Monday in Beijing, breaking the public impression that the outbreak in Beijing’s Shunyi district was receding, while the capital city’s guard against Hebei cases continues to escalate after the province that encircles Beijing reported more than 130 infections on Monday.

The family-clustered infections in Shunyi involving five patients prompted the district to lock down all villages starting Monday.

Fangshan and Daxing districts in southern Beijing are two regions which together have 95 villages connecting the capital city and Hebei. Fangshan on Monday announced nine highway checkpoint­s will inspect all vehicles and people that enter Beijing.

A checkpoint police officer who requested anonymity told the Global Times that people or vehicles that had been to Xingtai and Shijiazhua­ng, two epidemic-stricken Hebei cities, cannot enter Beijing even with a negative nucleic acid test certificat­e.

Those from other parts of Hebei need to provide a negative test result within 72 hours, and Hebei commuters who work in Beijing need a 14-day valid test result, he said.

According to Beijing’s epidemic control press conference, villages are heightenin­g measures by patrolling to prevent people or vehicles trying to circumvent highways to enter Beijing. Those villages are also carrying out strict health code checks and registrati­on rules to guarantee the wide rural areas will not be the Achilles’ Heel of Beijing’s control work.

Although commuters can go to their Beijing offices with a negative report and certificat­es proving they live in Hebei but work in Beijing, government advice and long queues at highway checkpoint­s due to meticulous inspection­s may persuade them not to do so.

Sanhe and Xianghe counties in northern Hebei issued notices that people are not allowed to skate, ice fish or conduct other activities on rivers due to epidemic control reasons and safety concerns. Crossing the provincial boundary on ice is also prohibited.

Wang Hongwei, a professor at Renmin University of China’s School of Public Administra­tion and Policy, told the Global Times on Monday that keeping Beijing safe is important, given its political significan­ce and transport links across China.

Wang attributed the strict epidemic control measures in Beijing to uncertaint­ies in the epidemic situation. The capital city is facing the virus inside and outside: it has to protect itself from Hebei’s outbreak while also fighting sporadic cases inside the city, mostly in Shunyi district.

To tackle the sporadic cases, the city introduced a circuitbre­aker mechanism to taxi firms and car-hailing platforms on Monday, the first day passengers were asked to screen a QR code the way they enter a shopping mall.

Keeping Beijing safe is important, given its political significan­ce and transport links across China.

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