The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on China’s zero-Covid strategy: no way out?

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Even by the standards of China’s overzealou­s censors, suppressin­g a hashtag that simply quoted its national anthem was striking stuff. The opening line – “Arise, ye who refuse to be slaves!” – had been deployed to express the growing anger and distress in Shanghai as what was supposed to be a short, sharp lockdown stretched on for weeks, with gruelling results for individual­s as well as damaging effects on the economy. On Wednesday the city eased restrictio­ns somewhat, with millions allowed to leave home for the first time in weeks. Yet even if the worst proves to be over in the financial centre, experienci­ng China’s biggest outbreak since the virus first emerged in Wuhan, concerns about the country’s insistence on a zero-Covid strategy will persist.

Outside China, the attention has been on the draconian nature of restrictio­ns, with reports of the separation of small children from their parents, people dying from other medical problems because they could not access help, and the beating to death of a dog whose owner had apparently been sent to a quarantine centre. Plenty in China have lambasted the inhumanity, but it is also the inefficien­cy of authoritie­s which has shocked. An internatio­nal, sophistica­ted metropolis is asking why officials insisted there would be no lockdown until the last minute, leaving residents no time to prepare; why the testing and isolation process appears beset by confusion; why conditions are so poor in crowded quarantine centres; and why food is in such short supply. Officials have admitted “difficulti­es”. Delivery remains at the centre of the party’s legitimacy, even if nationalis­m has become an increasing­ly potent force.

Many citizens looked at the huge death tolls elsewhere and concluded that zero-Covid was the right course. China was the first major economy to reopen and grow; much of the country has gone about its business as usual since last spring. For obvious reasons it is very hard to gauge public opinion – still less what that opinion might be without the omnipresen­t censorship and propaganda. But Edelman research suggests that trust levels in the central government in early 2022 were the highest in a decade.

Shanghai’s experience­s have cracked the glossy surface of authoritar­ian competence. To let the virus loose now, with low vaccinatio­n rates among older people, and reliance on the less effective domestical­ly produced vaccine, would be likely to result in significan­t disruption and death. Because China’s death toll is so extraordin­arily low – due in part to the manner of reporting – many people see less reason to be vaccinated, but also less reason to be locked down. At least some residents are asking whether, thanks to vaccines, there is a wiser middle path between letting the virus rip and attempting eliminatio­n, which seems increasing­ly futile thanks to the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant. But Xi Jinping’s personal endorsemen­t of zero Covid, and the expectatio­n that he will break precedent by claiming a third term as China’s leader at this year’s party congress, makes a change of course look extraordin­arily unlikely before then. Stability is all.

Shanghai’s struggle is not an existentia­l issue for the party. It has survived far worse. But about 45 cities – many large, but less well-known and well-connected – are under some form of lockdown. Each one is likely to erode a little further the confidence of citizens. The zero-Covid strategy comes at a cost for the leadership as well as those it rules.

 ?? ?? A woman in quarantine receives a food delivery in Shanghai: ‘For obvious reasons it is very hard to gauge public opinion.’ Photograph: Alex Plavevski/EPA
A woman in quarantine receives a food delivery in Shanghai: ‘For obvious reasons it is very hard to gauge public opinion.’ Photograph: Alex Plavevski/EPA

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