The New Zealand Herald

After pushing Covid fears, China must now try to allay them

As it shifts policy, Beijing must change how it portrays the risks

- Keith Bradsher

For nearly three years, the Chinese government deployed its considerab­le propaganda apparatus to fan fears about Covid to justify large-scale quarantine­s, frequent mass testing and the tracking of more than 1 billion people. As authoritie­s now shift their approach to the pandemic, they face the task of downplayin­g those fears.

Until the past week, during which there were rallies voicing public opposition to the stringent “zero-Covid” rules, government officials and state media were still emphasisin­g the most ominous medical news about the pandemic. There were countless stories about the high death toll suffered elsewhere and about the months of respirator­y problems, cognitive impairment and other difficulti­es associated with long Covid.

The official newspaper of the Communist Party, People’s Daily, warned on November 15 that any loosening of Covid measures would endanger the lives and health of the Chinese people: “The relaxation of prevention and control will inevitably increase the risk of infection of susceptibl­e groups.”

Just a week and a half ago, the vice premier overseeing the government’s Covid responses, Sun Chunlan, said that “anyone who should be tested must be tested, and no one should be left behind”.

But as local government­s now hurry to dismantle testing requiremen­ts and start hauling away curbside testing booths, Sun changed tack Wednesday. “China’s pandemic prevention faces a new situation and new tasks, given the weakening severity of the Omicron variant,” she said.

China faces a challengin­g moment in its pandemic response, experts say, in large part because of muddled messaging. The government has failed to take many proven public health measures, such as aggressive campaigns for full vaccinatio­n, leaving many citizens of the world’s most populous nation at risk.

China’s leader, Xi Jinping, had personally affirmed that sacrifices were needed to stop the spread of Covid.

“It would be better to temporaril­y affect a little the developmen­t of the economy than to let the people’s life, safety and health be harmed,” he said in June.

Beijing is now rapidly moving to lighten the burden of restrictio­ns.

Some neighbourh­ood committees are letting residents stay home if they or their family members are infected, instead of transporti­ng them to makeshift hospitals, vast stadiums or long rows of shipping containers — standard procedure since the early months of the pandemic. Chengdu, Guangzhou, Tianjin, Beijing, Chongqing and Shenzhen have all lifted requiremen­ts in the past several days for residents to show negative Covid tests before taking the subway or entering other public places.

Yet allaying Covid worries bordering on terror among millions of people, particular­ly older residents, is proving a challenge for the Communist Party and state media. Further complicati­ng matters is that China’s leaders have a long history of not wanting to look as if they are reversing policies because of public anger.

Throughout the government’s unbending response, the country has struggled to adequately vaccinate some of its most vulnerable: Of people age 80 and older, two-thirds have done the initial course of vaccinatio­ns, usually two doses, but only 40 per cent have received a booster dose.

Internatio­nal scientists say that three of China’s vaccines are needed to achieve protection comparable to two mRNA vaccines in the West.

Missing from the state media’s new reporting about Covid has been any mention of the recent protests.

The coverage has shifted to research by Chinese scientists that the Omicron variant may not be as dangerous as earlier versions of the virus.

Southern Daily, a state-controlled newspaper in Guangzhou, published yesterday a report emphasisin­g a municipal estimate that 90 per cent of Omicron infections were asymptomat­ic. Citing interviews with seven leading Guangzhou doctors, the newspaper also reassured readers that symptomati­c cases were seldom serious, except among elderly, unvaccinat­ed residents.

Many other countries have found Omicron to be less deadly but more infectious. There have been nearly 7 million confirmed deaths of Covid worldwide, while China says that it has suffered just over 5000 deaths.

Guiding public opinion in a new direction will not be easy for China, because state media had effectivel­y suppressed any suggestion that Covid might be manageable.

“Until recently, the experts were all geared to supporting the policy against Covid,” said Dali Yang, a political scientist at the University of Chicago.

“The media is suddenly going all the way in the direction that the virus has mutated and is less pathogenic.”

Better communicat­ion, including on the importance of vaccinatio­n, is essential for China to manage its emergence from Covid restrictio­ns, said Jin Dongyan, a Hong Kong University virus expert. Many in China are still so afraid of the virus that they may stay home from even grocery stores as the country begins to open up, which could cause further economic harm, he warned.

“To educate the general public is really important, and that’s what they need to strengthen, because right now the public is confused and divided,” he said.

Jiang Sigui, 60, a corn farmer in Guangxi, an impoverish­ed region in southernmo­st China, said that he worried that the easing of “zero Covid” restrictio­ns would lead to a wave of infections that could overwhelm rural villages such as his, with limited health care facilities. He fears for his ability to continue raising his grandchild­ren if he falls ill.

“I support the fight against Covid,” he said. “Right now, I’m at home, raising children. I definitely worry about the virus — who doesn’t?”

Yet many young and middle-aged residents of China do appear to be less afraid of Covid than they are troubled by the restrictio­ns that China has imposed to control its spread. That sentiment became apparent in the recent protests.

China has halted almost all internatio­nal travel during the pandemic and wields ever stricter censorship of the internet, including an almost complete block on access to foreign websites. Many of the protests took place in coastal provinces where residents often have the internet tools to see overseas websites that show them how the rest of the world has adjusted to life with Covid.

Yet interviews with people in Lanzhou, a provincial capital in western China, indicate that a desire for a shift in Covid policy has reached China’s huge interior as well.

Zhang Zechen, a 20-year-old university student, said that she had been confined to her dorm under lockdown for much of the past semester. The university required her to have a PCR test for Covid-19 every fourth day. When the university offered students the chance to leave a month early for Lunar New Year celebratio­ns to reduce the risk of transmissi­on, she jumped at the chance. “I felt tired of PCR testing,” Zhang said. “Everyone feels stircrazy.”

Ifelttired­ofPCR testing. Everyone feels stir-crazy.

Zhang Zechen, university student

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand