TO CURB COVID SPREAD, DOZENS OF SUBWAY STATIONS SHUT ACROSS BEIJING
BEIJING: Residents in Beijing woke up on Wednesday to an early morning announcement that dozens of subway stations and bus routes have been shut down as city authorities scramble to restrict movement as part of its efforts to stamp out an ongoing Covid-19 outbreak.
Over three dozen subway stations and around 150 bus routes were suspended indefinitely, the city government said in a statement.
The city has recorded a little over 500 Covid-19 infections - out of a population of around 22 million, including 51 for May 3 - since the outbreak began on April 22.
However, the low caseload hasn’t stopped authorities from restricting movement by public transport, locking down some communities, and suspending schools at least till May 11, especially in the populous Chaoyang district, which has around 3.5 million residents.
A majority of the cases were reported from Chaoyang where the central business district, embassies and large number of hotels and bars are located.
The city government has ruled that residents will need to furnish a negative nucleic acid test, taken in the week before, to use public transport from Thursday when government and private offices resume work after the five-day Labour Day holiday.
Many are likely to work from home.
Twelve of Beijing’s 16 districts have started three rounds of nucleic acid screening from Tuesday till Thursday on a daily basis in succession to curb the spread, a state media report said. Many residents of the city have already been tested at least five times in the last 10 days.
The measures taken by the Beijing government do not amount to a sweeping lockdown - as was implemented in Shanghai - but more of targeted attempts to seal areas from where cases have been reported.
Residents, however, are anxious about an impending full lockdown.
The government is minutely tracking the transmission chains of confirmed cases and their primary and secondary contacts to isolate them.
The government’s primary objective is to keep Beijing free from a large-scale outbreak - it is China’s political hub where the Communist party’s top leadership, including President Xi Jinping, stays.
It is also the year in which the twice-in-a-decade congress, a reshuffle of the CPC leadership, will take place where Xi is widely expected to secure a record third term as the leader.
After it launched what appeared to be a medium-range ballistic missile on
Wednesday