South China Morning Post

Blow to Shanghai’s goal of zero-Covid

73 new cases outside quarantine zones put target further out of reach

- Daniel Ren ren.wei@scmp.com

Shanghai’s daily new Covid-19 cases in unguarded zones rose for the second consecutiv­e day yesterday, a worrying trend in the presumed low-risk areas that further clouds the outlook for any easing of the restrictio­ns the commercial capital has been living under since April 1.

Local officials had hoped to confine infections within quarantine­d areas. Instead, the local health commission detected 73 cases in the “precaution­ary zones” – those that have not had an infection in the previous 14 days and their neighbouri­ng areas – up from 58 a day earlier.

“Rising infections in the unguarded zones prevented local authoritie­s from announcing that Shanghai had achieved the societal zero-Covid goal,” said Meng Tianying, a senior executive at Shanghai-based consultanc­y Domo Medical.

“It will take another few days for Shanghai to drasticall­y ease lockdown although it has lasted for more than a month.”

The precaution­ary zones had recorded zero cases on both Saturday and Sunday, heightenin­g hopes that the municipali­ty would soon announce Shanghai had achieved the societal zeroCovid goal.

Shanghai has been aiming for that goal, which means reducing new cases in low-risk, unguarded zones to zero, since mid-April.

Despite those hopes now being dashed at least temporaril­y, overall progress on reducing infections continues. New cases fell for the 10th straight day to 5,669 over the previous 24 hours, 22.7 per cent lower than a day earlier, according to data released yesterday. Symptomati­c cases plunged 62.3 per cent to 274, while 20 patients died.

Cumulative infections topped 582,000 since the outbreak began in the mainland’s commercial and financial capital on March 1.

Fatalities fell by 37.5 per cent from 32 recorded a day earlier, the biggest drop since the first three deaths were reported on April 18. Nearly all of the dead had been disqualifi­ed from being vaccinated because of underlying ailments such as terminal cancer, diabetes or heart disease. The total death toll in Shanghai stands at 521, most of whom were aged above 80 years.

The number of severe cases climbed to 488, from the 441 reported on Monday, while the number of patients in critical condition dropped to 88 from 93.

Nationwide, the mainland added 6,015 new cases in the previous 24 hours, 22.3 per cent fewer than a day earlier.

Last night, Beijing Centre for Disease Control and Prevention said 32 new infections had been detected, taking the total to 453 since the Omicron variant surfaced in the capital on April 22.

Once they eliminate new cases in the low-risk unguarded zones, the Shanghai government will shift focus to preventing the virus from spreading in the quarantine­d areas, which include hospitals, quarantine sites and high-risk residentia­l compounds that are already sealed off.

Shanghai has yet to publish a time frame for lifting the citywide lockdown that started on April 1.

Over the weekend, the local government allowed another 1,188 manufactur­ers to resume production under the “closed loop” system, bringing to about 2,000 the number of companies where workers are sleeping on-site or nearby to avoid contact with outsiders.

The local government pledged to allow more shops, restaurant­s and service providers to reopen in the coming days, but stressed that stringent virus control measures would be maintained.

“We must increase our tempo to outpace the virus and stop its spread,” Li Qiang, Shanghai Communist Party boss told officials in southweste­rn Songjiang district during an inspection tour yesterday.

“A victory over the virus can give huge support to businesses and people because they can return to normalcy quickly.”

It will take another few days for Shanghai to drasticall­y ease lockdown

MENG TIANYING, OF DOMO MEDICAL

 ?? Photo: EPA ?? Protective gear is exchanged amid the lockdown in Shanghai, where more than 70 new cases have been found in presumed low-risk zones.
Photo: EPA Protective gear is exchanged amid the lockdown in Shanghai, where more than 70 new cases have been found in presumed low-risk zones.

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