The Daily Telegraph

China locks down cities as resurgent virus sweeps the country

Xi Jinping’s zerocovid policy under fire after workers riot at iphone plant

- By Verity Bowman Simina Mistreanu

CHINA has reported a record number of Covid infections, with cities shuttering across the country as officials introduce frantic lockdowns.

The resurgence has thrown President Xi Jinping’s zero-covid strategy under renewed scrutiny and prompted the most extreme anti-lockdown protests since the pandemic began as the 31,444 Covid infections reported on Wednesday, broke the record set on April 13.

Apple’s main subcontrac­tor, Foxconn, the Taiwanese tech firm that produces more iphones than any other manufactur­er, has offered new staff 10,000 yuan (£1,160) to leave its factory immediatel­y in a desperate attempt to end days-long riots over conditions at the plant, according to reports. Its site in Zhengzhou has been hit by escalating unrest among workers who have complained that their bonus payments have been delayed and they were forced to share dormitorie­s with workers who had tested positive for Covid.

The company yesterday apologised to workers, blaming a technical error in the processing of new staff for the alleged delay in bonus payments.

“We apologise for an input error in the computer system and guarantee that the actual pay is the same as agreed in the official recruitmen­t posters,” it said.

Zhengzhou officials announced a five-day lockdown to curb infections after the Foxconn protests. The city of 10.3 million reported 674 infections yesterday, down from 827 a day earlier.

Several other cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chongqing have also tightened restrictio­ns as cases have increased.

Schools in the capital have moved to online classes and anyone seeking to enter public places, such as shopping centres, hotels and government buildings, must provide a negative PCR test taken within the previous 48 hours.

Thousands of temporary hospital rooms have been built in the southern manufactur­ing hub of Guangzhou, where nearly a third of the latest cases have been recorded.

Videos posted overnight on Wednesday appeared to show hundreds of Foxconn employees clashing with Covid officials and police officers in white hazmat suits. The officials can be seen retreating as the workers throw dismantled barricades at them.

Foxconn was left scrambling to hire new workers last month, when it imposed a Covid lockdown at its Zhengzhou plant, prompting thousands of staff to flee.

To keep production going, the company went on a hiring spree, promising higher pay and bonuses to new employees.

Adam Kucharski, co-director at the UK Centre for Epidemic Preparedne­ss and Response, said “big Covid waves” were hitting the country.

“China now seems to be in a similar position to much of Europe in late 2020 … with a need to slow transmissi­on down in (the) short term, while massively ramping up vaccine coverage, as (the) main long-term exit strategy,” he said.

Health officials said 85 per cent of those over 60 had received two doses of domestic vaccines by mid-august, but China has not approved more effective vaccines for public use.

 ?? ?? A worker in a hazmat suit guards an area of Beijing locked down to prevent the spread of Covid. Authoritie­s have reimposed mandatory testing, mask mandates and quarantine­s
A worker in a hazmat suit guards an area of Beijing locked down to prevent the spread of Covid. Authoritie­s have reimposed mandatory testing, mask mandates and quarantine­s

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