Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

After Shanghai, now focus shifts to Beijing

- Reuters

BEIJING/SHANGHAI: China’s capital Beijing tightened Covid restrictio­ns on Sunday as it battled an outbreak, while Shanghai let some of its 25 million residents venture out for light and air after reporting a second day of zero infections outside of quarantine areas.

Shanghai’s outbreak, which began in March, has been China’s worst since the early months of the pandemic in 2020. Hundreds of thousands have been infected and the city has forbidden residents from leaving their homes, to great public anger.

The outbreak in China’s most populous city and the risk of a spread in Beijing are testing the government’s zero- Covid approach in a year when Xi Jinping is expected to secure an unpreceden­ted third term as president.

Beijing, with dozens of daily infections in an outbreak now in its 10th day, has not locked down. More than 300 locally transmitte­d cases have been logged since April 22.

But on Sunday the capital tightened social distancing rules and launched a fresh round of mass testing in its most populous and worst-hit district.

In the past week the city of 22 million has conducted mass testing in most of its 16 districts, suspended all entertainm­ent venues, and banned restaurant dining.

Beijing’s sprawling Universal Studios theme park closed on Sunday, while in the highly visited Badaling section of the Great Wall, visitors were told to show proof of negative Covid test results before entering.

Chaoyang district, accounting for the biggest share of infections in Beijing’s outbreak, launched an additional round of mass testing, with public health workers knocking on doors to remind residents to get tested.

Anger in Shanghai

Shanghai’s citywide lockdown since early April has upended the daily lives of its residents, sparking worries about food and concern about being taken to crowded quarantine centres should they catch the virus.

Extreme measures taken to seal up residentia­l compounds, including fencing up entrances of buildings, have prompted outrage. Some residents have turned to social media to vent their frustratio­n, some clanged pots and pans outside their windows, and others clashed with public health workers.

While much of the city remains in lockdown, Shanghai officials, striking a confident tone, said on Sunday that curbs on some areas would be eased after the city reined in Covid transmissi­on risks at the community level, excluding cases in quarantine centres.

Six of its 16 districts attained zero-Covid status, meaning three consecutiv­e days with no new daily increases in infections.

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