The Guardian (USA)

Shanghai reportedly bans media use of the term ‘lockdown’ as lockdown ends

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

Authoritie­s in Shanghai have reportedly ordered the media to refrain from using the term “lockdown” while reporting on the end of the city’s twomonth lockdown.

This week the Chinese city of 25 million people reopened, allowing most to leave their homes, go to work, and use public transport after more than 60 days inside. On Thursday, according to leaked directives from the city, Chinese media were told to disseminat­e informatio­n about the changes to restrictio­ns, but ordered not to use the phrase “ending the lockdown”.

“Unlike Wuhan, Shanghai never declared a lockdown, so there is no ‘ending the lockdown’,” said censorship directives issued to media on Tuesday, and leaked to the China Digital Times.

“All parts of Shanghai underwent static management-style suppressio­n and suspension­s, but the city’s core functions kept operating throughout this period. Emphasise that related measures were temporary, conditiona­l, and limited.”

China Digital Times cautioned that such directives are sometimes delivered to publishers orally, and so the wording may not be exact. The Guardian has not independen­tly verified the document.

For more than two months Shanghai residents had been largely confined to their apartments or residentia­l communitie­s, or taken to centralise­d quarantine centres, often for simply living in the same building as a case. The early weeks of the lockdown were beset by food shortages and problems in accessing medical care. Businesses and factories which did not shut down had to operate in “closed loop” systems, often with staff living on site.

On Thursday, curbs were lifted for about 22.5 million people in lowrisk areas. Residents must still wear masks in public and avoid gatherings, and restaurant dining remains banned. Shops can operate at 75% capacity, while gyms will reopen at a later date.

The lifting of the restrictio­ns came as authoritie­s declared the outbreak to be “effectivel­y controlled”, but the directives also urged media to stress that the eased measures were “conditiona­l”.

“It is by no means the case that every person in every district across the whole city will be able to freely head out at once, nor that this is a uniform

relaxation,” it said.

On Thursday, a Shanghai-based journalist, Thomas Yau, reported his neighbourh­ood had already gone back into lockdown because of a single case walking down the street.

The chaos of Shanghai’s lockdown sparked major criticism of China’s commitment to a zero-Covid policy, and was a source of embarrassm­ent for Shanghai’s authoritie­s who had tried to avoid one. The resource-intensive policy had been effective throughout the pandemic, but the increased transmissi­bility of the Omicron variant challenged the usual methods of health surveillan­ce, mass testing, and targeted or regional lockdowns.

Despite the challenges, China’s leadership remains committed to the policy. Districts of Beijing were also put under lockdown, or ordered to work from home, while the city also enacted broad public transport shutdowns and other curbs on movement which began to lift last week.

Several cities and provinces have launched “routinised” testing regimes, requiring a regular negative PCR test – ranging from every two to seven days - in return for freedom of movement. Some areas require the test weekly. In Shanghai, people must test negative every 72 hours, and those testing positive, and their close contacts, face onerous quarantine­s.

 ?? ?? A worker in a protective suit cleans the floor at a subway station, after the Covid lockdown was lifted in Shanghai. Photograph: Aly Song/ Reuters
A worker in a protective suit cleans the floor at a subway station, after the Covid lockdown was lifted in Shanghai. Photograph: Aly Song/ Reuters

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