The Telegram (St. John's)

China’s ZERO-COVID policy not ‘sustainabl­e’

- JENNIFER RIGBY JOSEPHINE MASON

LONDON — The head of the World Health Organizati­on said on Tuesday China’s zero-tolerance COVID-19 policy is not sustainabl­e given what is now known of the virus, in rare public comments by the UN agency on a government’s handling of the pandemic.

“We don’t think that it is sustainabl­e considerin­g the behaviour of the virus and what we now anticipate in the future,” WHO Directorge­neral Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a media briefing. “We have discussed this issue with Chinese experts. And we indicated that the approach will not be sustainabl­e ... I think a shift would be very important.”

He said increased knowledge about the virus and better tools to combat it also suggested it was time for a change of strategy.

The comments come after China’s leaders have repeated their resolve to battle the virus with tough measures and threatened action against critics at home even as strict and prolonged lockdowns exact a heavy toll on the world’s second-largest economy.

Speaking after Tedros, WHO emergencie­s director Mike Ryan said the impact of a “ZERO-COVID” policy on human rights also needs to be taken into considerat­ion.

“We have always said as WHO that we need to balance the control measures against the impact they have on society, the impact they have on the economy, and that’s not always an easy calibratio­n,” said Ryan.

He also noted that China has registered 15,000 deaths since the virus first emerged in the city of Wuhan in late 2019 — a relatively low num- ber compared with nearly one million in the United States, more than 664,000 in Brazil and over 524,000 in India.

With that in mind, it is understand­able, Ryan said, that the world’s most populous country would want to take tough measures to curb coronaviru­s contagion.

Still, China’s ZERO-COVID policy has drawn criticism ranging from scientists to its own citizens, leading to a cycle of lockdowns of many millions of people, anguish and anger.

Most other nations that shared its approach initially have now at least begun a transition to strategies to live with the virus.

The continued outbreaks also underscore how difficult it is to stop the spread of the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant.

Under ZERO-COVID, authoritie­s lock down large population areas to stamp out viral spread in response to any coronaviru­s outbreak, even if just a small number of people test positive.

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