Regina Leader-Post

Some return to work as Beijing eases COVID rules

- EDUARDO BAPTISTA AND ANDREW GALBRAITH

BEIJING/SHANGHAI • Beijing returned to work on Thursday after a fiveday Labour Day holiday with China's capital on high COVID alert as it tries to eradicate an outbreak it has managed to limit to dozens of new cases a day for about two weeks.

Authoritie­s in Beijing are determined to avoid the fate of China's commercial hub of Shanghai, where most of its 25 million people have endured more than a month of increasing­ly frustratin­g confinemen­t to their residentia­l compounds.

The capital's streets were slightly less busy than on a normal working day as authoritie­s have encouraged people to work from home and the closure of scores of bus routes and more than 10 per cent of subway stations as part of COVID precaution­s has complicate­d commuting.

Transport officials have also asked ride hailing platforms to reduce activity in some parts of the city.

Still, many subway trains looked crowded and office districts were busy. Many people took to bicycles to get around.

Under a host of new curbs in recent days, Beijing residents hoping to take the subway or bus have to have a negative COVID test but it appeared that few checks were being made.

“Right now, I feel relatively safe at work and where I live, but I don't dare run around outside because I still feel the outbreak hasn't reached its peak,” said cook Liu Wentao.

Beijing was doing better two weeks into its outbreak than Shanghai did at that point, when daily cases were in the hundreds and rising.

The apparent success in keeping a lid on the outbreak has enabled authoritie­s to make small adjustment­s to restrictio­ns.

Some small parts of Chaoyang district, the epicentre of Beijing's outbreak, which had put restrictio­ns on movement, allowed people to go to work on Thursday though they were encouraged to work from home if possible and avoid gatherings.

Some isolated lockdowns of residentia­l buildings and the closure of gyms, restaurant­s and other venues remained in force.

In Shanghai, while authoritie­s say curbs on movement have been gradually eased in recent days in more areas, there was no significan­t change for many people living in communitie­s under lockdown.

China's uncompromi­sing “ZERO-COVID” policy looks increasing­ly bizarre to an outside world that is easing curbs or lifting them altogether in a bid to live with a disease that authoritie­s in those places have concluded can never be eradicated.

China argues its policy is saving lives, which makes the heavy economic and psychologi­cal costs of the lockdowns worth it.

Officials point to millions of COVID deaths outside China while its official death toll since the virus emerged in the central city of Wuhan in late 2019 is just over 5,000.

Vice-premier Sun Chunlan said in Shanghai on Sunday that communitie­s with no new cases for seven days should be allowed to return to “normal social order.”

Yet often seemingly arbitrary enforcemen­t of rules is a source of anguish for Shanghai residents.

I FEEL RELATIVELY SAFE AT WORK AND WHERE I LIVE, BUT I DON'T DARE RUN AROUND OUTSIDE.

In some communitie­s, people enforcing the rules only allow one member of each household out for a few hours a day.

Elsewhere, no one is allowed out even though the community's risk level has been officially downgraded.

The enforcers deny being told they can relax the rules and residents struggle to identify who exactly has the authority to ease them.

In some districts, buildings are assigned stars according to when their last COVID cases were recorded with the top rank of five stars indicating no new cases for at least two months.

On Thursday, a Wechat group of locked-down residents in a block of nearly 100 flats in the city's Changning district, pinged with celebratio­n at finally getting five stars.

“Great. Can I take the dog out for a walk?” one resident asked.

“I'm sorry, for the moment we are not allowed to take dogs for walks,” the building's volunteer manager responded.

 ?? KIN CHEUNG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People enjoy lunch in a restaurant in Hong Kong on Thursday as
COVID-19 restrictio­ns there were relaxed.
KIN CHEUNG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People enjoy lunch in a restaurant in Hong Kong on Thursday as COVID-19 restrictio­ns there were relaxed.

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