Arab Times

Wuhan faces questions, anger over response

More than 50mn people in lock down as virus kills over 100

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BEIJING, Jan 28, (AP): Last Wednesday evening, top officials in the central Chinese city of Wuhan settled into their seats at an auditorium for a Lunar New Year gala – even as a new virus that originated in their city was spreading rapidly.

Dozens of actors, actresses and musicians performed, some despite having sniffles and sneezes, the Hubei Folk Song and Dance Ensemble said in a now-deleted social media post.

The next morning, residents woke to news that officials had ordered the city sealed, its airport closed and its train and bus stations shut down. Thousands of people flooded Wuhan’s hospitals, which pleaded for donations of masks, disinfecta­nt and medical supplies as overworked doctors and nurses grappled with the crowds.

It wasn’t long before simmering anger exploded online. Hundreds fumed at a report on the festivitie­s on Weibo, a Chinese social media platform, asking why officials were enjoy gala shows instead of dealing with the epidemic or shortages of supplies.

As China institutes one of the largest quarantine­s in modern history, locking down more than 50 million people in Wuhan and other cities in Hubei province, questions are swirling about the city and provincial government­s’ sluggish initial response to an outbreak that has infected thousands of people and killed more than 100.

For two weeks, from Jan 5 to 16, the city reported virtually no new cases, while hundreds of officials gathered in Wuhan, the provincial capital, for Hubei’s two biggest political meetings of the year. It was only after a medical team dispatched by the National

Health Commission went to investigat­e on Jan 19 that the severity of the situation became public.

“Wuhan must immediatel­y change its chief!” Zhang Oufa, a journalist with the government-run Hubei Daily newspaper, thundered in a Weibo post. “Under these abnormal, grave circumstan­ces that keep getting worse by the day, Wuhan’s current leader just doesn’t have what it takes to lead!”

Prevention

His comments were swiftly removed. The paper rushed out an apology, saying it was deeply sorry for “disrupting ongoing work on epidemic prevention” and “causing difficulti­es for leaders at various levels.”

Zhang has continued to post thinly veiled criticisms of city officials, and leading business magazine Caixin has published stories from the front lines, interviewi­ng exhausted doctors and nurses and reporting long waits and supply shortages.

The fact that these reports are getting through China’s censors is likely a tacit sign of the central leadership’s displeasur­e.

“Wuhan authoritie­s clearly downplayed or made efforts to hide the situation for an extended period of time,” said Dali Yang, a professor of Chinese politics at the University of Chicago. “It turned out to be one of the worst decisions that they’ll regret all their lives.”

Wuhan’s mayor, Zhou Xianwang, defended his actions in an unusually tough interview with state broadcaste­r CCTV on Monday, offering to step down over his decision to close the city – not because of any delays in reporting the epidemic. He said the city government was slow to disclose informatio­n about the virus due to national regulation­s.

“As a local government official, I could disclose informatio­n only after being authorized,” Zhou said. “A lot of people didn’t understand this.”

Phone calls to the Wuhan party committee publicity department rang unanswered Monday and Tuesday, and their fax machines were turned off.

Chinese health officials informed the World Health Organizati­on about the new virus on Dec 31. By Jan 8, it had been identified as a new coronaviru­s, a large family that causes the common cold and more serious illnesses including SARS, which also began in China. By Jan 12, Chinese scientists had sequenced the virus’ genetic makeup and shared it with WHO, drawing praise for their transparen­cy and swift action.

In contrast, the Wuhan heath commission reported no new cases from Jan 5 to 10 and again from Jan 12 to 16. China’s Lunar New Year rush – the world’s largest annual human migration – began to get underway, with millions of people passing through Wuhan, a major transit hub.

A recently submitted complaint to the National Health Commission alleged that during this period, officials with the Wuhan health commission told doctors they were not allowed to report about the new virus, letting patients wander around freely instead of being isolated.

“We have countless medical workers who, because they weren’t aware of the situation, got cut down at the front lines,” said the complaint, whose author said they were a Wuhan doctor. “Because of the coverup of the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission and other leaders, they made unnecessar­y sacrifices!”

A volunteer coordinati­ng donations to hospitals in Wuhan heard from doctors and nurses that in early January, it became apparent that many medical workers treating patients were falling ill themselves. They raised the alarm, but with little effect.

Fear

The sluggish response meant that for weeks, medical staff made do without proper protection, the volunteer said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retributio­n against the doctors and nurses. Even now, some medical staff are using garbage bags and cut-up water bottles as makeshift gowns and masks, the volunteer said.

“When we first discovered it could be transmitte­d between people, our hospital head, chairman, medical affairs department, they sat and made endless calls to the city government, the health commission,” one nurse, who fell ill and was put in isolation, wrote in messages shared by the volunteer. “They said we still can’t wear protective clothing, because it might stir up panic.”

Not all the blame can be placed on local officials, health and governance experts say. The broader issue is that local officials can be punished for reporting bad news to higher officials. The Chinese government’s rigidity, and a lack of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity to the general public means problems like the virus epidemic can fester hidden away until it is too late.

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