China pledges to slowly get rid of ‘zero COVID’
China’s coronavirus czar said the country would take “baby steps” in extricating itself from a three-year pursuit of “zero COVID” after authorities stepped up censorship efforts following rare mass protests and ahead of a state funeral for a former leader.
“We should prioritize stability while pursuing progress: take baby steps, but don’t stop going, to optimize the COVID policy,” Vice Premier Sun Chunlan, who heads China’s coronavirus response efforts, said during a panel discussion with health workers on Thursday.
Sun, widely regarded as the face of China’s lockdown measures, had said Wednesday the country is facing a “new reality” as the virus now poses a lesser threat. She made the rare move of convening panel discussions on consecutive days amid widespread confusion over Beijing’s messaging, which had recently pushed local governments to loosen measures before imposing lockdowns again as infections continued to climb.
Her remarks were the surest sign so far that Beijing is moving to end a virus-eradication effort that has saved many lives, though at the high cost of sudden lockdowns, mass testing, sealed borders and a sluggish economy.
Chinese health officials also said this week they would prioritize getting booster doses to seniors, which global experts say is key to any reopening. Caixin, an independent financial publication, reported Thursday that China aims to ensure that 90 percent of residents over 80 are up-to-date on their vaccinations by late January.
Beijing has not offered a timetable on exiting zero COVID, but some health experts say the strictest measures could be lifted by the middle of next year.
“China should be ready to overhaul the current zero COVID policy in the first half of 2023, no later than the summer,” said Zhao Dahai, executive director at a health-policy center jointly run by Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Yale. He noted a new variant of the coronavirus that is more severe than omicron could put a halt to any reopening.
After protests against zero COVID spread to more than a dozen metropolises, some of China’s largest cities this week started lifting lockdowns, canceling mass testing and allowing some close contacts to quarantine at home. But measures that have long been phased out elsewhere in the world, such as testing requirements to access public entertainments spaces, remained in the southern economic hub of Guangzhou.
Urumqi, the capital of China’s northwestern Xinjiang region, Friday announced a phased reopening of restaurants, malls and ski resorts in the coming days. More residents were allowed to travel within the city, though 373 residential compounds remained locked down. A deadly fire in the city, which many Chinese believe was worsened by COVID-19 distancing measures, had been the trigger for the recent wave of protests.
China reported almost 35,000 new infections Friday — a high number by its standards — even as more cities paused mass testing requirements.
Some local leaders in China’s rustbelt regions have been more reluctant to loosen controls, in part because zero COVID was linked with loyalty to President Xi Jinping, who has tried to assert near-absolute control as he enters an unprecedented third term as China’s top leader.
Authorities in Jinzhou, a coastal city in northeastern China, issued a notice Thursday pledging commitment to the policy. “If we keep with the existing measures for another few days, we can announce a full victory. … It would be such a shame when we can eliminate the virus but don’t do it,” the notice read.
After backlash from residents, Jinzhou announced early Friday it would instead lift a lockdown on much of the city.
Top Chinese officials have not directly acknowledged the rallies, which are the largest non-state-sanctioned demonstrations since the Tiananmen protests of 1989.