Arab Times

Crowds fill streets after Wuhan lockdown ends

-

WUHAN, China, April 8, (AP): After more than two months indoors, Wuhan resident Tong Zhengkun was one of millions of people enjoying a renewed sense of freedom when the Chinese city’s 76-day coronaviru­s lockdown was lifted Wednesday.

“I haven’t been outside for more than 70 days,” an emotional Tong said as he watched a celebrator­y light display from a bridge across the broad Yangtze River flowing through the city. “Being indoors for so long drove me crazy.”

Streets in the city of 11 million people were clogged with traffic and long lines formed at the airport, train and bus stations as thousands streamed out of the city to return to homes and jobs elsewhere. Yellow barriers that had blocked off some streets were gone, although the gates to residentia­l compounds remained guarded.

Tong said his apartment complex was shut down after residents were found to have contracted the virus. Neighborho­od workers delivered groceries to his door.

Virus

Such measures won’t be entirely abandoned following the end of the city’s closure, which began on Jan 23 as the virus was raging through the city and overwhelmi­ng hospitals. Schools are still closed, temperatur­es are checked when people enter buildings and masks are strongly encouraged. City leaders say they want is to simultaneo­usly bring back social and commercial life while avoiding a second wave of infections.

The ability to travel again is a huge relief, however, and around 65,000 were expected to depart Wednesday by plane and train. Wuhan residents are now permitted to leave without special authorizat­ion as long as a mandatory smartphone applicatio­n powered by a mix of data-tracking and government surveillan­ce shows they are healthy and have not been in recent contact with anyone confirmed to have the virus.

It didn’t take long for traffic to begin moving swiftly through the reopened bridges, tunnels and highway toll booths. Nearly 1,000 vehicles went through a busy highway toll booth at Wuhan’s border between midnight – when barricades were lifted – and 7 a.m, according to Yan Xiangsheng, a district police chief.

According to airport official Lou Guowei, the first departing flight, MU2527, left Wuhan Tianhe Internatio­nal Airport at 7:25 am for Sanya, a coastal city in Hainan province known for its beaches.

“The crew will wear goggles, masks, and gloves throughout the flight,” chief flight attendant Guo Binxue, was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency. “It will be very smooth because we have made much preparatio­n for this flight.”

Found

Xiao Yonghong had found herself stuck in Wuhan after returning to her hometown on Jan 17 to spend the Lunar New Year with her husband, son and parents-in-law.

“We were too excited to fall asleep last night. I was looking forward to lockdown lift very much. I set up an alert to remind myself. I was very happy,” said Xiao, who was waiting for her train outside Hankou station with her son and husband, all three of them wearing masks and gloves.

At the airport, Chen Yating took personal protection a step further, wearing white coveralls, gloves, a mask and a baseball cap. She was waiting to catch a flight to the southern business hub of Guangzhou.

“We are living in a good era,” Chen said. “It is not easy to have today’s achievemen­t.”

Restrictio­ns in the city where most of China’s more than 82,000 virus cases and over 3,300 deaths from COVID-19 were reported have been gradually eased as the number of new cases steadily declined. The government reported no new cases in the city on Wednesday.

While there are questions about the veracity of China’s count, the unpreceden­ted lockdown of Wuhan and Hubei have been successful enough that other countries adopted similar measures.

“The people in Wuhan paid out a lot and bore a lot mentally and psychologi­cally,” resident Zhang Xiang said. “Wuhan people are historical­ly famous for their strong will.”

During the lockdown, Wuhan residents could leave their homes only to buy food or attend to other tasks deemed absolutely necessary. Some were allowed to leave the city, but only if they had paperwork showing they were not a health risk and a letter attesting to where they were going and why. Even then, authoritie­s could turn them back on a technicali­ty such as missing a stamp, preventing thousands from returning to their jobs outside the city.

Residents of other parts of Hubei were allowed to leave the province starting about three weeks ago, as long as they could provide a clean bill of health. People leaving the city still face numerous hurdles at their final destinatio­ns, such as 14-day quarantine­s and nucleic acid tests.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait