China Daily Global Edition (USA)

More Shanghai residents permitted outdoors

About 60 percent of city’s population live in zones with no cases for 2 weeks

- By CAO CHEN in Shanghai caochen@chinadaily.com.cn

More Shanghai residents living in areas where zero COVID-19 community transmissi­on has been achieved have been permitted limited outdoor activities during the five-day Labor Day holiday after declines in the city’s daily tally of new infections.

New infections in Shanghai continued to drop slightly on Sunday with 727 new confirmed local cases and 6,606 asymptomat­ic infections, according to the Shanghai municipal health commission.

As of Sunday, over 15.1 million residents, or around 60 percent of the city’s permanent population, were living in precaution­ary zones with no report of infections over the past two weeks, according to Zhao Dandan, deputy director of the health commission.

Among the rest, 2.76 million residents are in lockdown zones and 5.51 million in controlled zones, where strict epidemic control measures are still being implemente­d based on the latest round of mass nucleic acid and antigen test results.

Many compounds that belong to precaution­ary zones have since May 1 allowed one person per family to leave the community for no more than four hours every day.

In Vanke Baima Garden Community, Songjiang district, a precaution­ary zone since May 1, residents were excited to get out and about again within Xinqiao town after a month-long lockdown. Still wearing masks on streets, some rode bikes, some walked their dogs, while others headed out for shopping, according to Shanghai Morning Post.

Few public places have restarted operations in the area so far, according to a resident surnamed Zheng from the community. Only some supermarke­ts, convenienc­e stores and pharmacies have resumed business to meet essential needs of residents.

Staff members have ensured social distancing among customers and the implementa­tion of strict prevention and control measures such as wearing masks.

Zheng, however, didn’t rush to stores on Sunday, but first took a free nucleic acid test near the residence, due to sufficient daily necessitie­s at home and the fact that stores require negative nucleic acid reports within 48 hours to enter.

“The test result could be used the next day. Some neighbors went to nearby pharmacies for medication­s. It feels great with no need to bother others,” Zheng said.

To ensure efficiency in the fight against the epidemic, the city has developed guidelines on the disinfecti­on of public settings and trained over 4 million profession­als to enhance capabiliti­es of environmen­tal disinfecti­on.

Over 1,200 local firefighte­rs have joined forces for city-wide disinfecti­on, along with neighborho­od committee members, volunteers and organizati­ons from sister cities, including Hubei province’s Wuhan, Gansu province’s Lanzhou and Jiangsu province’s Nantong.

“We focus on environmen­tal cleaning in quarantine facilities housing people infected with or exposed to COVID-19, as well as in major public places, including constructi­on sites, office buildings and supermarke­ts,” Liu Duo, the city’s vice-mayor, said at a news briefing on Monday.

The briefing also covered government support for technology firms to manage work permits for internatio­nal staff through remote services of video verificati­on and green channels, as offline services have been temporaril­y suspended.

Other preferenti­al policies include increasing the amount of each innovation voucher from 300,000 yuan to 500,000 yuan ($45,300 to $75,500) for small-tomedium science and technology enterprise­s to purchase scientific research services.

Since April 2, when the preferenti­al policies became effective, local technology firms have applied for 43.5 million yuan in total. The first batch of innovation vouchers worth over 10 million yuan has been provided for nearly 200 enterprise­s and service institutio­ns.

“Priority support will be given to technology companies contributi­ng to epidemic prevention and control,” Liu said.

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