Kuwait Times

China’s pursuit of zero COVID driving expats away

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BEIJING: Colin Chan spent more than a decade building a life in China, but enduring ever-changing COVID rules and five weeks of quarantine convinced the Singaporea­n that it was time to leave. China’s reluctance to budge on its strict zero-COVID policy is hastening the departure of expats from the world’s second-largest economy, with business groups warning that unpredicta­ble regulation­s were driving foreigners away.

When Chan returned to China from Singapore at the end of February, he was prepared for a long quarantine in Shanghai before he could head home to Beijing-direct internatio­nal flights to the capital are vastly reduced because of COVID. But within days of reaching Beijing, he was told to stay at home for another two weeks, with a device installed on his door that sounded an alarm if it was opened. “Restrictio­ns seemed to be changing all the time,” said Chan, who left China this month after completing these back-to-back quarantine­s.

He is among a wave of expats who have left, or are considerin­g leaving China. Over 80 percent of companies surveyed by the American Chamber of Commerce last month said China’s virus policies had hit their ability to attract or retain foreign staff. And the British Chamber said Wednesday that business risk was “at the highest level seen since 2020” when the virus was spreading rapidly in China during the early phase of the pandemic.

China’s strategy of snap lockdowns, strict travel curbs and lengthy quarantine­s largely kept the virus at bay in the first two years of the Covid crisis, and allowed people to maintain a semblance of normal life.

But the fast-spreading Omicron variant shook that approach, as authoritie­s scrambled to contain outbreaks with a rapidly changing mosaic of curbs that tested even the most seasoned expats’ resolve.

More than a third of the firms surveyed by the American Chamber in March said their foreign staff had been reduced by at least 10 percent because of Covid curbs since the beginning of the pandemic.

‘Crazy direction’

Nowhere is this more evident than in Shanghai, whose 25 million residents are seething under a weeks-long lockdown that has seen food shortages, scattered protests and a stream of online vitriol. The cosmopolit­an economic powerhouse boasts a large overseas community of around 164,000 according to census data released last year. They work in a range of industries, from tech and finance to teachers at internatio­nal schools.

But there are signs that even the hardiest of them may decide to leave. One longtime British resident in Shanghai told AFP they planned to repatriate over worries that the latest lockdown marked the beginning of a “really crazy direction” in virus policies. “Zero-COVID is like a belief now, a really fervent belief,” they added, requesting anonymity as they had not informed their employer of their plans. “It doesn’t really matter that COVID’s not that serious (now)... We have to get to zero.”

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