Las Vegas Review-Journal

More COVID testing for Beijing, Shanghai

New cases stemming from clubs spreading

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BEIJING — Residents of parts of Shanghai and Beijing have been ordered to undergo further rounds of COVID-19 testing following the discovery of new cases in the two cities, while tight restrictio­ns remain in place in Hong Kong, Macao and other Chinese cities.

Shanghai has only just emerged from a strict lockdown that confined most of its 24 million residents to their homes for weeks, and the new requiremen­ts have stirred concerns of a return of such harsh measures.

The latest outbreak in China’s largest city, a key internatio­nal business center, has been linked to a karaoke parlor that reopened without authorizat­ion during lockdown and failed to enforce prevention measures among employees and customers, including the tracing of others they came into contact with, according to the city health commission. All such outlets have been ordered to temporaril­y suspend business, the city’s department of culture and tourism said.

“The virus spreads quickly because such entertainm­ent venues are mostly indoor and closed, with frequent movement of people, high concentrat­ions of people and inadequate personal protection measures,” said Zhao Dandan, deputy director of Shanghai’s municipal health commission.

Apartment blocks where cases are discovered continue to be isolated, while mass testing in the majority of the city’s 16 districts has been ordered at least through Thursday. A negative test result obtained within the previous 48 hours is required to enter residentia­l compounds and public venues under the “two tests within three days” program.

Entertainm­ent businesses from water parks to chess clubs and internet cafes have been wanting to reopen but face an uncertain regulatory environmen­t.

Those types of venues will “gradually open in an orderly and strict manner according to the situation of epidemic prevention and control in each district,” said Jin Lei, deputy director of the city’s culture and tourism department.

Shanghai’s lockdown prompted unusual protests both in person and online against the government’s harsh enforcemen­t, which left many residents struggling to access food and medical services and sent thousands to quarantine centers.

Beijing has also experience­d a recent outbreak linked to a nightlife spot. It has been conducting regular testing for weeks, and at least one residentia­l compound in the suburb of Shunyi, where many foreign residents live, has been locked down with a steel fence installed over its entrance to prevent residents from leaving.

Enforcemen­t in China’s capital has been far milder than in Shanghai, although officials continue to require regular testing and prevention measures.

In the northern city of Xi’an, whose 13 million residents endured one of China’s strictest lockdowns over the winter, restaurant­s have been restricted to takeout only and public entertainm­ent spots closed for a week starting Wednesday.

A notice on the city government’s website said the measures were only temporary and intended to prevent a renewed outbreak. It said supermarke­ts, offices, public transport and other facilities are continuing to operate as normal, with routine screening including temperatur­e checks and people being required to show an app proving they are free of infection.

The gambling hub of Macao has locked down the famed Grand Lisboa Hotel after COVID-19 cases were discovered there.

 ?? Mark Schiefelbe­in The Associated Press ?? A worker swabs a woman’s throat for a COVID-19 test at a site in Beijing on Wednesday.
Mark Schiefelbe­in The Associated Press A worker swabs a woman’s throat for a COVID-19 test at a site in Beijing on Wednesday.

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