Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

CHINA SKEPTICS fear spin in virus victory claims.

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Emily Rauhala of The Washington Post; and by Joe McDonald, Yu Bing and Mari Yamaguchi of The Associated Press.

China is winning its “people’s war” against the coronaviru­s. That’s the message being sent by Chinese leaders and diplomats and amplified by the Communist Party-controlled press.

A central part of the narrative is that Wuhan, the onetime center of the outbreak and the site of a recent visit from Chinese leader Xi Jinping, has stopped transmissi­on of the virus in its tracks. It went five days without reporting new, local cases. On Monday, Wuhan reported one new case.

In a country emerging from a crushing lockdown — and a world looking for answers — lower case counts appear to be genuinely good news. Other countries have closely watched the crisis in Wuhan for lessons on how best to control a local outbreak.

But Wuhan’s near-zero count is being called into question by independen­t reporting and met with suspicion from experts. It underscore­s wider issues across China. The country’s overall coronaviru­s numbers have been met with some skepticism since the first signs of crisis.

Separate reports from Chinese, Japanese and Hong Kong media suggest the dearth of new cases in Wuhan may reflect a dip in testing. And public-health experts also note that China does not include confirmed asymptomat­ic cases in their figures — a potential blind spot.

These gaps are particular­ly worrying because as of Wednesday tens of millions of residents of Hubei province were able to move around for the first time in months. Though Wuhan, the provincial capital, will remain in lock

down, some fear another wave of cases could be possible as people start to travel into and around the Chinese heartland.

“Zero cases, in this case, has more of a symbolic meaning,” said Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations.

“It is telling people, ‘everything is safe, it is time to go back to work, it is time for business to go back to normal,’” he continued, “To show the outside world how effective the Chinese approach is and how it can provide a viable alternativ­e to Western approaches.”

Residents of Wuhan are allowed out of the city but cannot leave Hubei until April 8.

IMPROVEMEN­T SEEN Most access to Wuhan, a manufactur­ing center of 11 million people, or 1½ times the population of New York City, was shut down Feb. 23.

The city is 450 mile west of Shanghai.

Restrictio­ns that would expand to become the most intensive anti-disease controls ever imposed spread to Huanggang and the nearby cities of Ezhou, Chibi, Qianjiang, Zhijiang, Jingmen, Xiantao, Xiaogan and Huangshi.

At the peak of China’s restrictio­ns, some 700 million people were in areas covered by orders or official requests to stay home and limit activity.

But even China’s premier, Li Keqiang, warned local government­s Monday not to “cover up” reporting coronaviru­s “for the sake of keeping new case numbers at zero.”

China’s lockdown of Wuhan and much of Hubei province was unpreceden­ted. Flights and trains were stopped, public transporta­tion was suspended and businesses have been shuttered — not for days, or weeks, but for two months.

Though China’s methods included draconian tactics, such as locking people in their apartments and intensive surveillan­ce, the world is looking to Hubei to see what tactics might work.

It is clear that the situation in Wuhan has improved dramatical­ly.

Reporting from Wuhan in late January and February showed overburden­ed hospitals where doctors were collapsing and patients were being treated in corridors.

On March 10, more than two months after the lockdown started, Xi visited the city, a signal to local officials that ordinary life should soon resume. The next week Wuhan reported zero new cases for the first time since the outbreak began.

But independen­t reporting has tested the claim. A report Monday from Caixin, a Chinese outlet that has offered groundbrea­king coverage of the crisis, found that the virus may still be spreading in the city.

“There are still a few or a dozen asymptomat­ic people every day,” an unidentifi­ed official at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention was quoted by Caixin. “It can’t be determined whether transmissi­on has been completely cut off.”

China, unlike other countries, only counts patients with both a positive test and symptoms, meaning that someone who is tested and is confirmed to have the virus but remains asymptomat­ic may be statistica­lly invisible.

ASYMPTOMAT­IC PATIENTS

The South China Morning Post of Hong Kong reported that it saw classified Chinese government data suggesting that more than 43,000 people in China had tested positive for the virus by the end of February without showing symptoms.

If that figure is true, about one-third of China’s cases were asymptomat­ic — a type of case that researcher­s around the world are still desperatel­y trying to understand.

There are questions, too, about the rate of testing. Another Hong Kong news outlet, RTHK, talked to people in Wuhan who claimed they were being denied testing in an attempt to keep case counts low.

Japan’s Kyodo news quoted an unnamed Wuhan doctor saying that testing was being suspended in the wake of Xi’s visit to shore up the premise that the battle has been won.

The Washington Post has not independen­tly confirmed these accounts.

A Post account of the early days of the outbreak in Wuhan showed how secrecy and censorship fueled the spread of the virus across China and around the world. In January, local officials stopped recording new cases ahead of a Communist Party conclave in Hubei province. China also failed to give critical data to the World Health Organizati­on.

By putting a positive spin on data from Wuhan, officials are likely trying to heed Xi’s call to get the economy moving.

China is struggling to “find a balance between fighting the virus and killing the economy,” said Dali Yang, an expert on Chinese politics at the University of Chicago.

As Wuhan looks ahead to the end of its lockdown on April 8, authoritie­s will need to step up testing, not reduce it, said Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiolo­gist and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

“It is critically important to maintain vigilance,” she said. “Now is not the time to declare victory.”

Wuhan has factories operated by Groupe Renault, Nissan Motor Co., PSA Peugeot-Citroen and Honda Motor Co. in joint ventures with state-owned Dongfeng Motor Group.

Renault said its factory in nearby Shiyan reopened March 11 and a Wuhan factory is scheduled to restart March 30.

Honda said its three factories in Wuhan reopened March 11. Nissan said a factory in Xiangyang reopened the following day.

Dongfeng said its own factories in Hubei were approved to resume production as of Monday.

 ?? (Chinatopix via AP) ?? Travelers line up to buy tickets Wednesday at a railway station in Yichang in central China’s Hubei province as trains began carrying factory employees back to work after a two-month lockdown. More photos at arkansason­line.com/326virus/.
(Chinatopix via AP) Travelers line up to buy tickets Wednesday at a railway station in Yichang in central China’s Hubei province as trains began carrying factory employees back to work after a two-month lockdown. More photos at arkansason­line.com/326virus/.

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