The Guardian (USA)

Shanghai lockdown: some parents allowed to stay with Covid-positive children after backlash

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Shanghai is allowing at least some parents to stay with children infected with Covid-19, making an exception to a policy of isolating anyone who tests positive after a public outcry.

The announceme­nt came as China’s largest city remained in lockdown and conducted more mass testing on Wednesday following another jump in new cases.

A top city health official said at a news conference that parents could apply to stay with children with “special needs” and accompany them if they fully comprehend the health risks and sign an agreement.

The parents must wear masks, dine at a different time than their children, avoid sharing items with them and strictly follow all regulation­s, said Wu Qianyu of the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission. She did not define what qualified as “special needs.”

Her announceme­nt followed Chinese state media reports a day earlier that an isolation site set up at the Shanghai New Internatio­nal Expo Center was accepting children with parents. The city has opened sprawling isolation centres for tens of thousands of people to isolate the growing number of positive cases.

Reports that parents were being separated from their infected children had sparked a wave of protest online last weekend, fuelled by photos showing several children in cots at a quarantine site with no parents in sight.

Footage of a pet corgi being beaten to death on the streets of Shanghai over fears it may have the virus has also sparked outrage and frustratio­n with China’s zero-Covid policy.

“There is no humanity, and while the whole world is living a normal and orderly life, there are still ‘volunteers’ who have lost their humanity. Happening in China in 2022. Very sad,” one person wrote on Weibo.

Last November, the death of another corgi – killed in its apartment while its owner was serving mandatory hotel quarantine in Jiangxi province – sparked a similar outcry.

Shanghai reported 17,077 new cases detected over the previous day, all but 311 of them in people who showed no symptoms. Under China’s zero-Covid approach, the city requires all those who test positive to be held in designated locations for observatio­n, along with their close contacts.

The latest cases bring Shanghai’s total to about 90,000 in an outbreak that began last month. No deaths have been ascribed to the outbreak driven by the Omicron BA.2 variant, which is much more infectious but also less lethal than the previous Delta strain. Two deaths have been reported in another ongoing outbreak in Jilin province in China’s northeast.

An official from the EU Chamber of Commerce in China joined a growing chorus of criticism of the Shanghai lockdown, which has disrupted daily life and commerce in a major financial and business centre.

“We see a severe shortage of living necessitie­s, particular­ly fresh vegetables, and citizens are unable to get their deliveries via their apps,” said Bettina Schoen-Behanzin, chair of the chamber’s Shanghai chapter.

While some residents were receiving food supplies from their district government, she said that “a kind of black market” had developed charging “rocket-high prices” for fruits and vegetables.

“Another really big fear is ending up in one of those mass central quarantine sites,” Schoen-Behanzin said in an online event for member companies and journalist­s.

Others complained earlier about shortages of medical workers, volunteers and beds in the isolation wards. More than 38,000 health workers from 15 provinces have been sent to Shanghai to help with mass testing and other needs.

Beijing is also tightening measures after 11 cases were detected in the Chinese capital in recent days.

Authoritie­s closed down a shopping and office centre in the busy Wangjing district and are requiring those arriving in the city to report to their place of work or residence within 12 hours and undergo a Covid-19 test within 72 hours. They must undergo another test within 48 hours of returning to their place of work.

Despite growing public frustratio­n and concerns about the economic effects, China says it is sticking to its hardline “zero-tolerance” approach mandating lockdowns, mass testing and the compulsory isolation of all suspected cases and close contacts.

While China’s vaccinatio­n rate hovers about 90%, its domestical­ly produced inactivate­d virus vaccines are seen as weaker than the mRNA vaccines such as those produced by Pfizer/ BioNTech and Moderna that are used abroad, as well as in the Chinese territorie­s of Hong Kong and Macau. Vaccinatio­n rates among elderly people are also much lower than the population at large, with only around half of those over 80 fully vaccinated.

 ?? Photograph: VCG/ Getty Images ?? Shanghai is allowing some parents to stay with their Covid-infected children during lockdown after a public backlash.
Photograph: VCG/ Getty Images Shanghai is allowing some parents to stay with their Covid-infected children during lockdown after a public backlash.

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