The Citizen (KZN)

China’s spike in new virus cases

ALERT: NEW CLUSTER LINKED TO WHOLESALE FOOD MARKET

- Beijing

Resurgence prompts fresh lockdowns with people ordered to stay home.

China reported 57 new cases of the coronaviru­s yesterday, the highest daily figure since April, as concerns grew about a resurgence of the disease.

The domestic outbreak in China had been brought largely under control through strict lockdowns that were imposed early this year – but a new cluster has been linked to a wholesale food market in south Beijing.

The National Health Commission (NHC) said 36 of the new cases were local transmissi­ons in the capital, and Beijing health officials said later that all three dozen were linked to the Xinfadi market.

The other two domestic infections reported yesterday were in northeaste­rn Liaoning province and were close contacts of the Beijing cases.

The new cluster has prompted fresh lockdowns with people ordered to stay home in 11 residentia­l estates near the market which supplies most of the city’s fresh produce.

City official Xu Hejian said yesterday that Beijing had entered an “extraordin­ary period”.

The alert was sounded in the capital after the NHC confirmed the first cases for two months on Friday and city officials delayed the return of primary school students that had not already resumed classes.

One of yesterday’s new cases was a 56-year-old man who works as an airport bus driver and had visited the Xinfadi market before falling ill, the state-run People’s Daily reported.

He developed a fever a week later and was diagnosed with Covid-19,

the newspaper said.

The meat section of the huge, sprawling market was closed yesterday and reporters saw hundreds of police officers and security personnel plus dozens of paramilita­ry police blocking access to the area.

Officials have said that everyone who works at the market and lives in surroundin­g neighbourh­oods has to undergo testing, as well as other residents who have visited the market since 30 May.

A vegetable market adjacent to Xinfadi was open yesterday and trucks were arriving to deliver or collect stock.

One driver said he was collecting crates of mushrooms to take to supermarke­ts and restaurant­s in Beijing, his surgical mask pulled down under his chin.

“Afraid? Not really” said the man surnamed Zhang.

“But anyway I have no choice – I am part of the lowest class of society. So I have to keep working in order to make a living.”

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