Cape Times

Chinese cities ease Covid curbs

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MORE Chinese cities including Urumqi in the far west announced an easing of coronaviru­s curbs yesterday as China tries to make its zero-Covid policy more targeted and less onerous after unpreceden­ted protests against restrictio­ns last weekend.

Urumqi, the capital of the Xinjiang region and where the protests first erupted, will reopen malls, markets, restaurant­s and other venues from today, authoritie­s said, ending strict lockdowns after months.

There was no sign of any significan­t unrest this weekend, although police were out in force in the Liangmaqia­o area of Beijing and in Shanghai around Wulumuqi Road, which is named after Urumqi. Both sites saw protests a week ago.

A deadly fire last month in Urumqi sparked dozens of protests against Covid-19 curbs in over 20 cities after some social media users said victims had been unable to escape the blaze because their apartment building was locked down. Authoritie­s denied that.

The protests were an unpreceden­ted show of civil disobedien­ce in mainland China since President Xi Jinping took power in 2012.

In the days since, numerous cities have announced the easing of lockdowns, testing requiremen­ts, and quarantine rules.

Vice-Premier Sun Chunlan, who oversees Covid-19 efforts, said last week that the ability of the virus to cause disease was weakening – a change in messaging that aligns with what many health authoritie­s around the world have said for more than a year.

China is set to further announce a nationwide easing of testing requiremen­ts as well as allowing positive cases and close contacts to isolate at home under certain conditions.

For the time being, steps to ease restrictio­ns have varied across the country.

From today, people in Shanghai will no longer have to show a negative Covid-19 test to take public transport and visit parks, authoritie­s announced yesterday.

Earlier yesterday, the city of Nanning, capital of the southern region of Guangxi, cancelled a requiremen­t for a negative Covid-19 test to take the subway.

On Saturday in Beijing, authoritie­s said the purchase of fever, cough and sore throat medicines no longer required registrati­on. The restrictio­n had been imposed because authoritie­s believed people were using the medication to hide Covid-19 infections.

Authoritie­s in various districts in the capital have in recent days announced that people who test positive for the virus can quarantine at home.

Some inconsiste­ncies as the restrictio­ns are eased have angered people, including a requiremen­t in some places for a negative Covid-19 test even though mass testing centres were closing.

In Beijing and Wuhan city, where the virus first emerged in late 2019, that caused lengthy queues at the few remaining testing booths.

“Are they stupid or just plain mean?” one social media user asked. “We shouldn’t shut down Covid-19 testing stations until we get rid of the Covid-19 test pass.” New daily case numbers dropped nationwide to 31 824, authoritie­s said yesterday, which may be due in part to fewer people being tested. Authoritie­s also reported two new Covid-19 deaths.

Xi’s zero-Covid policy has had a devastatin­g impact on the world’s second-largest economy and roiled global supply chains.

China argues the policy, which has all-but-shut its borders to travel, is necessary to save lives and prevent the healthcare system from being overwhelme­d.

Despite the easing of restrictio­ns, many experts said China was unlikely to begin significan­t reopening before March at the earliest, given the need to ramp-up vaccinatio­ns, especially among its vast elderly population.

“Some people have doubts about the safety and effectiven­ess of the country’s new coronaviru­s vaccine,” the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily said yesterday.

“Experts say this perception is wrong,” it said, adding that domestical­ly made vaccines were safe.

 ?? | EPA ?? A DELIVERY man walks at Raffles city shopping mall in Beijing, China. Many shopping malls in Beijing have announced their reopening as of December 1, with a negative PCR test result taken within 48 hours needed for customers to enter.
| EPA A DELIVERY man walks at Raffles city shopping mall in Beijing, China. Many shopping malls in Beijing have announced their reopening as of December 1, with a negative PCR test result taken within 48 hours needed for customers to enter.

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