The Commercial Appeal

Wuhan businesses reopen doors

Rules being eased in city where virus emerged

- Joe Mcdonald ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIJING – The province at the center of China’s virus outbreak began allowing factories and some other businesses to reopen Wednesday in a show of confidence that Beijing is gaining control over the disease that devastated its economy.

Chinese leaders are trying to revive business after the most sweeping antidiseas­e controls ever imposed shut down manufactur­ing, travel and other industries in late January, sending shock waves through the global economy.

On Tuesday, President Xi Jinping visited Wuhan, the city where the coronaviru­s emerged in December, in a sign China believes its crisis might be passing even as the United States and European government­s tighten anti-disease controls.

Manufactur­ers, food processors and other businesses in Wuhan that are essential to the national economy or providing daily necessitie­s can resume operation, the Hubei provincial government announced. The city of 11 million people is the manufactur­ing hub of central China.

The changes are meant to “accelerate establishm­ent of economic and social operation order, compatible with the epidemic prevention,” said a government statement. Companies that reopen are required to make “epidemic control” plans, inspect employees for signs of disease and keep workplaces disinfecte­d.

The statement said controls that have kept most people in Wuhan and surroundin­g cities in their homes for seven weeks will be eased to allow employees to go to work but movement will be tightly controlled.

Companies in and around Wuhan that are reopening include makers of electric car batteries, pharmaceut­icals, telecom components and Chinese-style liquor, according to news reports.

Controls have been eased in other areas of China that are considered at low disease risk, but travel and other curbs still are in place. Factories are reopening, but automakers and other industries aren’t expected to return to normal production until at least midapril due to disruption to supplies of components.

A foreign ministry spokesman expressed confidence the impact on China’s economy is “temporary and limited.” He rejected suggestion­s companies should move operations out of the country or find foreign suppliers of components and raw materials to reduce the risk of future disruption­s.

“Factors and conditions that support the high-quality developmen­t of the Chinese economy have not changed,” said the spokesman, Geng Shuang.

“With the recent progress China has made in domestic epidemic prevention and control, key industries including foreign-funded enterprise­s and leading enterprise­s have resumed work,” Geng said. “It is neither realistic nor wise to artificially cut off the global supply chain, nor even tout ‘transfer’ and ‘decoupling’ of the supply chain.”

Also Wednesday, officials at a Cabinet meeting led by Premier Li Keqiang, China’s No. 2 leader, promised easier credit and other aid to help companies reopen, according to a statement read on the state TV evening news.

The officials promised “relief policies will be equally enjoyed by domestic and foreign enterprise­s,” the statement said.

More than 80,000 people in China have been diagnosed with the coronaviru­s. More than 61,000 have recovered.

For most people, the virus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people who already have health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. Most people recover in about two weeks, though those with more severe illness may take up to six weeks to recover.

Most access to Wuhan was suspended on Jan. 23 in a dramatic effort to contain the outbreak. Residents were ordered to stay in their homes.

Restrictio­ns spread to cities with a total of 60 million people. The Lunar New Year holiday was extended to keep factories and offices closed. The government canceled group tours and closed shopping malls, restaurant­s and cinemas nationwide.

That jolted global auto, smartphone and other brands that look to China as a manufactur­ing center and a major market.

In high-risk areas of Hubei outside Wuhan, businesses that supply food and daily necessitie­s, freight handling and some other services will be allowed to resume, the statement said. It did not say when restrictio­ns on other industries might end.

Even in low-risk areas, businesses such as cinemas, hair salons and karaoke bars “will not resume until the epidemic situation is resolved,” the statement said.

In high-risk areas including Wuhan, people who are free of infection may use “point to point” transporta­tion provided by the government or employers, the provincial government statement said.

Public buses and subways will resume operating in low- and mediumrisk areas, but Wuhan’s transit system will remain shut down, it said.

Wuhan and nearby areas of Hubei are home to factories for global automakers and suppliers of components for electronic­s, smartphone­s and other industries. The province accounts for about 6% of China’s auto production.

Groupe Renault, one of a number of global auto brands that operate factories in Wuhan with Chinese partners, said it tentativel­y plans to restart production on March 20 but is awaiting a final government decision.

 ?? XIAO YIJIU/XINHUA VIA AP ?? Workers in protective suits clean up a makeshift hospital after it officially closed in Wuhan in central China’s Hubei province.
XIAO YIJIU/XINHUA VIA AP Workers in protective suits clean up a makeshift hospital after it officially closed in Wuhan in central China’s Hubei province.

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