South China Morning Post

SHANGHAI’S DAILY CASES HALVE TO LESS THAN 1,500

City records an 18-day low of 1,487 infections in the past 24 hours, as the number of patients with symptoms also declines by 2.6 per cent to 228

- Daniel Ren ren.wei@scmp.com

New Covid-19 cases in Shanghai halved overnight, staying below five figures for the 13th straight day, as innumerabl­e rounds of mass tests raised hopes that the current outbreak may be nearing its end, almost six weeks after sending China’s commercial hub into lockdown.

New cases fell 50.7 per cent to an 18-day low of 1,487 infections in the past 24 hours, while the number of patients showing symptoms declined by 2.6 per cent to 228, with seven deaths, according to data released yesterday.

“It is a good sign that the number of infections in Shanghai maintained a downward spiral,” Zhang Chaoyue, an analyst with Northeast Securities, said. “The good news is that the single-day numbers showed Shanghai might have achieved the so-called societal zero-Covid goal.”

Infections of the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant had been in steady decline in Shanghai since April 23, holding below 5,000 cases for the past eight days. As many as 612,500 people in the city of 25 million residents have caught the disease since March 1, most of them asymptomat­ic. The death toll since April 18 has risen to 560, translatin­g to a fatality rate of 0.09 per cent of the infected.

Local authoritie­s enforced a two-day “static management” order this week across the city’s so-called precaution­ary zones, instructin­g residents to remain at home and curbing the movements of medical staff, delivery personnel and community volunteers, even if those areas had not reported a single infection in the past 14 days.

This appeared to have paid off, as authoritie­s reported no infections in any of the areas under the standstill order on Tuesday, compared with an earlier attempt that found 25 cases.

Shanghai’s government has refrained from declaring victory, as authoritie­s prepare to track down and isolate every infection in China’s largest population centre, in pursuit of the so-called dynamic zero-Covid strategy.

The goal is not “sustainabl­e”, considerin­g the behaviour of the coronaviru­s, the World Health Organizati­on director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said on Tuesday. A model by Chinese and US researcher­s suggested, given China’s vaccine efficacy and coverage, an unchecked outbreak could “generate a tsunami of Covid-19 cases” between May and July leading to more than 1.5 million deaths.

“We still see risks of a rebound in new cases,” Zhao Dandan, deputy director of the Shanghai health commission, said during a press briefing. “Shanghai remains determined to pursue the dynamic zero-Covid policy.”

Shanghai, the new epicentre of the mainland’s latest outbreak, started a phased lockdown on March 28 when it sealed off the Pudong area. Authoritie­s reversed their plan to relax the lockdowns in Pudong, and shut the whole city down on April 1.

The lockdown, now entering its sixth week, strained supply chains in one of the world’s most vital manufactur­ing hubs, forcing tens of thousands of companies to suspend their production.

The Shanghai government has allowed more than 2,000 manufactur­ers to resume work under strict “closed-loop” conditions since late last month, where workers have to be tested daily and are required to sleep on-site to ensure zero contact with outsiders. However, a survey of the first 666 companies found half of them operating at less than 30 per cent capacity, according to the Shanghai Securities News newspaper.

After eliminatin­g the virus in the low-risk unguarded zones, Shanghai is expected to largely loosen some of the more draconian virus control and prevention measures. Quarantine staff will be barred from entering homes without permission, to assuage public outcry at the practice, Shanghai officials said on Tuesday.

Widely shared videos showed quarantine staff in hazmat suits and armed with disinfecta­nts knocking on doors in Huangpu district to carry out disinfecti­on.

The disinfecti­on raids were apparently not limited to Shanghai. Another video from Suining in Jiangsu province showed a family being visited by disinfecti­on staff, who checked the refrigerat­or, and sprayed disinfecta­nt on the sofa and laundry on the balcony.

Health officials have confirmed quarantine staff would not make forced entries, according to a report in ThePaper.cn.

 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? Customers shop at a supermarke­t in Shanghai, as some areas see restrictio­ns easing.
Photo: Xinhua Customers shop at a supermarke­t in Shanghai, as some areas see restrictio­ns easing.

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