The Star Malaysia

Parks, museums shut again

More cities resume mass testing amid spike in cases

- — Reuters

BEIJING: Beijing shut parks, shopping malls and museums while more Chinese cities resumed mass testing for Covid-19, as China fights a spike in cases, deepening concerns about its economy and dampening hopes for a quick postcorona­virus reopening.

China reported 28,127 new local cases nationally for Monday, nearing its daily peak from April, with infections in the southern city of Guangzhou and the southweste­rn municipali­ty of Chongqing accounting for about half of the total.

In the capital, Beijing, cases are hitting fresh highs each day, prompting calls from the city’s government for more residents to stay put.

There were two new deaths attributed to Covid-19 by health officials, compared with three over the weekend, which were China’s first since May.

The latest wave is testing recent adjustment­s China has made to its zero-covid policy, which asks authoritie­s to be more targeted in their clampdown measures and steer away from the widespread lockdowns and testing that have strangled the economy and frustrated residents.

The municipali­ty of Tianjin, near Beijing, yesterday became the latest to order city-wide testing, after a similar announceme­nt on Sunday by Shijiazhua­ng.

Even after the tweaked guidelines, China remains a global outlier with its strict Covid restrictio­ns, including borders that remain allbut-shut nearly three years into the pandemic.

Tightening measures in Beijing and other cities, even as China tries to avoid city-wide lockdowns such as the one that crippled Shanghai this year, have renewed investor worries over the economy and prompted global stocks and oil prices to slip overnight.

Nomura analysts said yesterday their in-house index estimated that localities accounting for about 19.9% of China’s total gross domestic product were under some form of lockdown or curbs, up from 15.6% last Monday and not far off the index’s peak in April, during Shanghai’s lockdown.

The Chinese capital on Monday warned that it is facing its most severe test of the Covid-19 pandemic and tightened rules for entering the city, requiring arrivals from elsewhere in China to undergo three days of Covid testing before they are permitted to leave their accommodat­ion.

Numerous

Beijing residents have seen their buildings locked down, although those restrictio­ns often last just a few days.

Some city residents said they had experience­d delays in grocery deliveries, because of heavy volumes.

Many museums were closed and venues such as the Happy Valley amusement park and the city’s vast Chaoyang Park, a popular spot with runners and picnickers, said yesterday they would shut due to the outbreak. Beijing reported 1,438 new local cases, up from 962 on Sunday. The central city of Wuhan, where the virus was first discovered, issued a notice yesterday urging its residents to only travel between home and work. Vice-premier Sun Chunlan, who has spearheade­d China’s zero-covid policy, visited Chongqing on Monday and urged authoritie­s there to adhere to the measures and bring the outbreak under control, the municipali­ty said.

Investors had hoped that China’s more targeted enforcemen­t of zero-covid curbs could herald more significan­t easing, but many analysts are cautioning against being too bullish.

Many businesses, especially customer-facing ones, also fear they may not survive until next year as customers continue to hold tight to their cash.

China argues that President Xi Jinping’s signature zero-covid policy saves lives and is necessary to prevent the healthcare system being overwhelme­d.

Many experts caution that full reopening requires a massive vaccinatio­n booster effort and a change in messaging in a country where the disease remains widely feared.

Authoritie­s say they plan to build more hospital capacity and fever clinics to screen patients, and are formulatin­g a vaccinatio­n drive.

“The real picture may not be as rosy as it seems,” Nomura analysts wrote, saying they only expected any reopening to accelerate after March next year, when the reshuffle of China’s top leadership is completed.

“Reopening could be back and forth as policymake­rs may back down after observing rapid increases in cases. As such, local officials may be even more reluctant to be the initial movers when they try to sound out Beijing’s true intentions,” Nomura wrote.

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