BusinessMirror

Most of Shanghai has ended virus spread, 1 million left in lockdown

- The Associated Press writer Joe Mcdonald contribute­d to this report.

BEIJING—MOST of Shanghai has stopped the spread of the coronaviru­s in the community and fewer than 1 million people remain under strict lockdown, authoritie­s said Monday, as the city moves toward reopening and economic data showed the gloomy impact of China’s “zerocovid” policy.

Vice Mayor Zong Ming said 15 out of Shanghai’s 16 districts had eliminated virus transmissi­on among those not already in quarantine.

“The epidemic in our city is under effective control. Prevention measures have achieved incrementa­l success,” Zong said at a news briefing.

Supermarke­ts, malls and restaurant­s were allowed to reopen Monday with limits on the numbers of people and mandated “no contact” transactio­ns. But restrictio­ns on movement remain in place and the subway train system remains closed for now.

Even as case numbers fall, city and national authoritie­s have sent mixed messages about the state of Shanghai’s outbreak and when life can return to normal in the city of 25 million, where many residents have been confined to their homes, compounds and neighborho­ods for more than 50 days. A prospectiv­e date of June 1 has been given for a full re-opening.

Zong said that authoritie­s “remain sober” about the possibilit­y of the outbreak rebounding, particular­ly as reports of new infections continue to come in from centralize­d isolation centers and older, rundown neighborho­ods.

“Citywide, our prevention efforts are still not firmly enough establishe­d and it requires all of our continuing hard work and the cooperatio­n of the broad masses of citizens and friends...to restore the normal running of the city in an orderly fashion,” Zong said.

Shanghai’s ruthless and frequently chaotic implementa­tion of virus restrictio­ns has sparked protests over the lack of food, medical care, freedom of movement and already highly limited privacy rights.

Despite that, China has rejected all criticisms against “zero-covid,” including from the World Health Organizati­on. The ruling Communist Party says it is committed to “resolutely fighting any attempts to distort, question or dismiss China’s anticovid policy.”

China reported 1,159 cases of infection Monday, the vast majority in Shanghai. Almost all were infections without symptoms.

In Beijing, where a much smaller outbreak has led to mass testing and a lockdown imposed building by building, 54 cases were reported. Authoritie­s have ordered people to work from home, moved schools online and limited restaurant­s to take-out only in the capital.

China’s strict lockdowns have played havoc with employment, supply chains and the economy in general, and data released Monday showed factory and consumer activity was even weaker than expected in April.

Retail sales plunged 11.1 percent, while manufactur­ing output sank 2.9 percent after factories closed and those that kept operating with employees living at their workplace were forced to reduce output due to disruption in supplies of components.

About half of the 9,000 biggest industrial enterprise­s in Shanghai are back at work after controls that shut down most of the city starting in late March eased, said Fu Linghui, director of statistics for the National Bureau of Statistics.

Private sector economists have China’s economic growth forecasts for this year to as low as 2 percent, well below the ruling party target of 5.5 percent and last year’s 8.1 percent expansion.

Despite such news, politics continues to drive the ruling party’s response to the pandemic. Looking ahead to a key conclave later this year, party leaders said after a May 5 meeting that containing outbreaks would take priority over the economy.

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