Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China opens some theaters

Movie-goers allowed back in with virus precaution­s

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BEIJING — China is going back to the movies.

After months of closure, limited numbers of moviegoers were allowed back into cinemas last week in cities such as Shanghai, Hanzhou and Guilin where the risk of virus infection is considered low. Customers wore masks, left open seats among them and observed other safety precaution­s.

At Shanghai’s Tianshan theater, an audience gathered for a showing of the Chinesemad­e feature “A First Farewell.”

Workers were disinfecti­ng and polishing at theaters in Beijing, which recently downgraded its emergency response level after seeing no new cases of local infection in 14 days.

Conference­s, exhibition­s, sports events, performanc­es and cinemas are expected to reopen gradually after passing risk appraisals and with “necessary prevention measures,” Chen Bei, the city government deputy secretaryg­eneral, told reporters.

Chinese are enthusiast­ic moviegoers, and the country was expected to surpass the U.S. this year as the world’s biggest box office before the pandemic hit.

The cinema reopenings come as China is relaxing many restrictio­ns while maintainin­g mask wearing, temperatur­e checks and social distancing. A cluster of cases in the far western region of Xinjiang is China’s only current outbreak of domestic infections, and mandatory two-week quarantine­s remain in effect for Chinese arriving from abroad to guard against imported cases.

Economic activity has gradually recovered, and China reported an unexpected­ly strong 3.2% expansion in its GDP during the latest quarter after lockdowns were lifted and factories and stores reopened.

That made China the first economy to resume economic growth since the pandemic began in its central city of Wuhan.

The 6.8% contractio­n in January-March was the country’s worst downturn since at least the mid-1960s.

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