Shanghai Daily

COVID-19 cases see lowest daily jump in 3 weeks

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CHINA reported the lowest daily increase in new COVID-19 cases in more than three weeks, official data showed yesterday, reversing a sharp uptick a day earlier, amid efforts to contain the disease ahead of a major holiday break.

New confirmed reported cases more than halved to 42, the National Health Commission said in a statement, down from 92 a day earlier and marking the lowest one-day increase since 33 reported on January 8.

Of the 33 new locally transmitte­d infections, northeaste­rn Heilongjia­ng reported 22 new cases while new patients reported in neighbouri­ng Jilin Province fell to 10 from 63 a day earlier. The remaining nine cases were imported infections involving travellers arriving from overseas.

National and local authoritie­s continue to discourage travel even as the number of new cases fell, underscori­ng their concerns about another flare-up as the country approaches the Lunar New Year holiday period next month when hundreds of millions typically travel.

Official forecasts are for the total number of trips taken during the holiday break to fall 60 percent from 2019, the last time when Chinese travellers did not face any major restrictio­ns in movement during the period.

The number of asymptomat­ic infections, which China does not classify as confirmed cases, also fell to 16 from 19 a day earlier.

The total number of confirmed mainland COVID-19 infections to date now stands at 89,564, while the death toll remained unchanged at 4,636.

China will continue to provide COVID-19 vaccines to other countries, especially the developing ones, in a timely manner within its capacity and contribute to the building of a community of health for all, a Foreign Ministry spokespers­on said yesterday.

Spokespers­on Wang Wenbin made the remarks at a daily press briefing after announcing that China donated COVID-19 vaccines to Pakistan yesterday morning, the first shipment of China’s vaccine aid to other countries.

Reiteratin­g China’s commitment to making its COVID-19 vaccines a global public good once developed and put into use, Wang said China will contribute to achieving the accessibil­ity and affordabil­ity of vaccines in developing countries. “We act on our words.”

China is also providing vaccine aid to 13 developing countries, including Brunei, Nepal, the Philippine­s, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Sri Lanka, Mongolia, Palestine, Belarus, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe and Equatorial Guinea, with 38 more developing countries in need slated to receive aid later.

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