Global Times

Beijing upgrades restrictio­ns to curb ‘ still grim’ situations

▶ Capital cuts quarantine times for overseas arrivals

- By GT staff reporters

Beijing on Wednesday doubled down on measures to curb viral transmissi­on by asking residents in Chaoyang district to work at home, extending the suspension of restaurant­s’ dining- in services as well as closing some stops and stations along bus routes and subway lines.

Residents in some key areas of Beijing’s most populous Chaoyang district will have to start working at home from Thursday, and those who must work in their offices should travel by themselves and reduce gatherings at companies, Xu Hejian, spokespers­on of the Beijing municipal government, said on Wednesday.

Xu said that Beijing will continue its epidemic measures after the May Day holidays, which ran from April 30 to May 4, including the delay of primary and middle schools’ reopening and the closure of entertainm­ent, cultural and sports venues.

Beijing has also closed some stops and stations along bus routes and subway lines. A total of 158 bus routes running within Chaoyang district and 31 routes in Fangshan district will be adjusted from Wednesday.

While 63 routes in Chaoyang and 12 in Fangshan will be fully shut down, buses on other routes will either skip some stops or only run along certain areas in the lines.

Xu also announced the close of entrances and exits at 62 subway stations along 14 lines from Wednesday, adding that the measure will not affect passengers changing lines inside interchang­e stations.

These stricter measures came after its fresh COVID- 19 flare- up has seen over 500 infections since the end of April. Xu said that the total cases in the fresh wave of the epidemic in the capital had exceeded the number reported in cluster infections in the Xinfadi wholesale market in 2020.

Beijing’s daily new cases have been reported at around 50 for days, and there were still several cases reported in communitie­s, indicating that the capital’s epidemic prevention and control situations were “still grim,” Xu said.

At the same time, Beijing adjusted the quarantine policy for COVID- 19 close contacts and internatio­nal travelers. Instead of the 21- day centralize­d quarantine, close contacts will now undergo 10 days of centralize­d quarantine and seven days of home quarantine. During quarantine, these people should undergo nucleic acid testing and antigen testing.

The shortening of quarantine times was based on scientific judgment that the Omicron has a faster transmissi­on but shorter incubation period, which makes long- time quarantine­s unnecessar­y, said Wu Hao, an expert at the National Health Commission’s Disease Prevention and Control Advisory Committee.

The shorter quarantine times will have less of a mental impact on the public, and are better for the country and society, which can relieve pressure on resources such as medical and isolation facilities, Wu said.

Health experts said this policy will provide a reference for further adjustment of anti- COVID- 19 measures.

Beijing is conducting three more rounds of nucleic acid testing from Tuesday to Thursday for 12 districts. The first round of testing collected samples from 19.9 million people, and three tubes each of which mixed 10 samples tested positive, Xu said.

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? On May 4, 2022, an entrance of the Jintaixizh­ao subway station in Chaoyang district, Beijing is seen closed. Beijing has closed some stops and stations along bus routes and subway lines amid the epidemic.
Photo: VCG On May 4, 2022, an entrance of the Jintaixizh­ao subway station in Chaoyang district, Beijing is seen closed. Beijing has closed some stops and stations along bus routes and subway lines amid the epidemic.

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