The Free Press Journal

China's restrictio­ns curb holiday travel

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Many Chinese are marking a quiet May Day holiday this year as the government's "zero-Covid" approach restricts travel and enforces lockdowns in multiple cities.

All restaurant­s in Beijing are closed to dine-in customers from Sunday through the end of the holiday on Wednesday, open only for takeout and delivery. Parks and tourist attraction­s in the Chinese capital are limited to half capacity. The Universal Studios theme park in Beijing, which opened last year, said it had shut down temporaril­y.

The pandemic situation varies across the vast nation

of 1.4 billion people, but the

Transport Ministry said last week that it expected 100 million trips to be taken from Saturday to Wednesday,

which would be down 60% from last year. Many of those who are travelling are staying within their province as local government­s discourage or restrict cross-border travel to try to keep out new infections.

China is sticking to a strict "zero-Covid" policy even as many other countries are easing restrictio­ns and seeing if they can live with the virus. Much of Shanghai, China's largest city and a finance, manufactur­ing and shipping hub, remains locked down, disrupting people's lives and dealing a blow to the economy.

The major outbreak in Shanghai, where the death toll has topped 400, appears to be easing. The city recorded about 7,200 new locally transmitte­d cases on Saturday, down from a peak of 27,605 on April 13. Outside of Shanghai, only 364 new cases were found in the rest of mainland China.

Beijing, which has tallied about 300 cases in the past nine days, is restrictin­g activity to try to prevent a large outbreak and avoid a citywide lockdown similar to Shanghai.

The pandemic situation varies across the vast nation of 1.4 billion people

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