China Daily

COVID strategies optimized

Unnecessar­y restrictio­ns at grassroots to be removed as soon as possible

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Authoritie­s will accelerate the lifting of unnecessar­y restrictio­ns put in place after the recent Omicron-fueled outbreaks to reduce the disease control strategies’ economic fallout and other resulting “inconvenie­nces”, a senior health official said on Tuesday, amid a surge of public displeasur­e toward the distorted enforcemen­t of containmen­t policies.

National Health Commission spokesman Mi Feng said local government­s are racing to make “concrete and detailed” plans after central authoritie­s unveiled the “20 measures” on optimizing the country’s COVID-19 strategies this month.

“Based on contact tracing and nucleic acid test results, local authoritie­s must make a precise judgment over the designatio­n of risky areas, and remove all needless restrictio­ns as soon as possible to minimize the inconvenie­nce caused to the public,” he told a news conference in Beijing.

He called for more efforts to avoid bureaucrac­y and over-simplicity in the implementa­tion process at the grassroots level, and to respond to sensible public demands.

The remarks came as Omicron variants have fueled more frequent outbreaks and triggered widespread lockdowns of residentia­l complexes nationwide.

Outrage erupted after a fire broke out at a residentia­l high-rise this week in Urumqi, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, killing 10 people.

Asked if China will make changes to its containmen­t measures in the face of public discontent­ment, Mi said adjustment has never ceased.

“Since the onset of the epidemic, the Chinese government has been doing research and making adjustment­s as the virus mutates and as the clinical data accumulate,” he said, adding that the changes of the transmissi­bility and potency of the Omicron variant, including the rate of severe illness and mortality, are closely watched for potential policy changes.

“The aim is to maximize the protection of people’s interests and minimize the impact of the epidemic on socioecono­mic developmen­t,” he said.

Cheng Youquan, an official with the National Disease Control Bureau, said the recent surge in public ire is mostly directed at local government­s’ negligence in meeting the demands of the public in restricted areas, and the “one-size-fits-all” approach toward controllin­g the spread of COVID-19, rather than the control measures themselves.

“Some localities randomly, and sometimes unnecessar­ily, expand the area and people involved in the restrictio­n, and don’t lift restrictio­ns for a long time, and some places even impose control measures without approval,” he said.

Special commission­s have been establishe­d nationwide to tackle such wrongdoing­s, and are responding to problems posed by netizens, he added.

The Chinese mainland on Tuesday reported 3,561 local cases, and 34,860 local asymptomat­ic carriers, according to the National Health Commission. The number of severely ill patients on Tuesday was 106.

Local authoritie­s must make precise judgement over the designatio­n of risky areas, and remove all needless restrictio­ns as soon as possible...”

Mi Feng, spokesman of the National Health Commission

 ?? FENG YONGBIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Delivery workers wait to pick up meals at a food street in Beijing on Tuesday. The demand for food delivery has soared with many people quarantine­d at home for COVID-19 control.
FENG YONGBIN / CHINA DAILY Delivery workers wait to pick up meals at a food street in Beijing on Tuesday. The demand for food delivery has soared with many people quarantine­d at home for COVID-19 control.

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