Los Angeles Times

China’s ‘wartime’ approach to virus

In Hebei province, more than 20,000 are bused to quarantine sites. Outbreak leaves millions in lockdown.

- By Alice Su Ziyu Yang of The Times’ Beijing bureau contribute­d to this report.

Thousands in Hebei province have been moved into quarantine, and millions more are in lockdown.

BEIJING — Zhao Renmi awakened to the sound of village officials shouting that everyone had to pack and go, without explanatio­n of where or for how long. Word was spreading of a new COVID-19 outbreak, so she gathered her children and obeyed.

“My heart is really troubled. It’s hard to bear,” said Zhao, a woman with closecropp­ed hair who lives in rural Hebei, in a video posted this week on Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok. She was one of about 20,000 residents being evacuated from 12 nearby villages, according to local reports and health officials, as part of China’s crackdown on its largest coronaviru­s outbreak in months.

More than 500 new cases have been found since Jan. 2 in Hebei, the industrial province surroundin­g Beijing, sparking a “wartime mode” response from Chinese authoritie­s fearful of the virus spreading before the upcoming Spring Festival, when hundreds of millions of Chinese crisscross the country to go home each year.

The jump in infections comes as a World Health Organizati­on mission investigat­ing the origins of the pandemic is expected to arrive Thursday. An embarrassi­ng glitch occurred last week when Beijing announced on the day several members of the team had already begun their journeys to China that their visas were not approved, prompting a delay — and frustratio­n from WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

China has been sensitive to criticism by the U.S. and other countries that it did not do enough to prevent the virus from spreading beyond its borders one year ago. It is unclear what access the WHO team will have in assessing the genesis of the pandemic. Most medical experts believe it was transmitte­d by an animal in a food market in Wuhan, but others suggest it may have originated in a laboratory.

Dr. Dale Fisher, an infectious diseases specialist based in Singapore and member of an earlier WHO mission to China, told Reuters on Tuesday that expectatio­ns were “very low” the medical team would come away with significan­t answers.

About 18 million residents of Hebei’s capital, Shijiazhua­ng, and the nearby city of Xingtai have been forbidden to leave, with public transporta­tion halted, mass testing underway and stayat-home orders enforced in the strictest lockdown since Wuhan was sequestere­d in early 2020.

In the rural areas around Shijiazhua­ng where many of the cases in the most recent outbreak were found, villagers have been evacuated. On Douyin, users posted videos of villagers bundled up in winter coats with suitcases, plastic sacks and children in tow, lining up to board red buses headed for quarantine.

Zhao swiveled her camera to show a packed backpack, two fertilizer sacks full of clothes and her children’s things, and steamed buns to eat on the way. “I don’t understand. I feel like a refugee,” she said. “But I guess we obey the nation’s arrangemen­ts. If they want us to move, we move.”

Such acceptance of government orders has helped China contain the pandemic and restart its economy far ahead of much of the world. Despite accusation­s that authoritie­s undercount­ed cases and mismanaged last year’s initial outbreak, China’s sweeping restrictio­ns and granular control since then have kept total case counts below 98,000, with 4,795 deaths, as reported by Johns Hopkins University.

The latest outbreak has left one dead, the first such fatality since May 17. Previous “wartime mode” reactions to tiny outbreaks through 2020 have quickly controlled the virus and allowed a swift return to work, school, travel and social gatherings.

Yet that same insistence on control has obstructed research into the pandemic’s origins and silenced Chinese voices that challenge the government’s positive narrative. In late December, a former lawyer named Zhang Zhan was sentenced to four years in prison for recording videos in Wuhan of overcrowde­d hospitals, fearful residents and her own questions about government suppressio­n of whistleblo­wers.

Zhang is one of at least four Chinese video bloggers, including another lawyer and a former CCTV host, who disappeare­d from Wuhan while posting onthe-ground videos last year.

Lu Qiang, party secretary of Xiaoguozhu­ang village, one of the first places where the outbreak began in Shijiazhua­ng, told Chinese business news outlet Yicai that it had taken about 10 days to evacuate all 4,000 villagers. It wasn’t easy to convince the villagers, Lu said in the report, which was removed from the internet a few hours after it was published Tuesday.

Many villagers had questioned why they should move if quarantine sites were not prepared. Why move the whole village instead of just positive cases? Why couldn’t they quarantine at home? Lu had spent a morning speaking into the village broadcast system, he said, telling them: “If we leave, we’ll feel better and so will others. This is the right thing to do.”

The operation was haphazard and quarantine conditions undesirabl­e, though they eventually improved, a Xiaoguozhu­ang villager said in the report. Big buses moved villagers in groups of 50 to 60 to quarantine sites where there were often no blankets or pillows.

At least one bus had left its passengers on board overnight because no quarantine spots were available. The bus door remained open despite the 1.5-degree temperatur­e, out of fear that turning on the heat would increase virus transmissi­on, the report said.

Similar complaints were raised online about a school used for quarantine in Xingtai. People taken there for quarantine posted videos on the social media platform Weibo of soiled bathrooms and dormitorie­s and photos of people crowding to get water, complainin­g that there was no social distancing or hygiene.

“This isn’t quarantine, this is concentrat­ion,” one user wrote. Students meanwhile protested that they had not been informed their dormitorie­s would be requisitio­ned and that their personal items were still inside.

Xingtai authoritie­s released a statement acknowledg­ing the quarantine shortcomin­gs and promising improvemen­ts. Some of the Weibo posts were then deleted.

Contact tracing data released by authoritie­s showed that many of the initial Hebei cases were linked to village weddings, including one in a hotel across from Shijiazhua­ng airport. Some villagers in Xiaoguozhu­ang also reportedly worked as janitors or luggage handlers at that airport, one of the designated entry ports for internatio­nal travelers.

Authoritie­s said there was no link between the Hebei outbreak and a more infectious strain of the coronaviru­s from the United Kingdom. But new strains similar to ones found in the U.K. and South Africa have been discovered in several other provinces. Four additional Hebei cities and counties announced seven-day stay-at-home orders on Tuesday. A county in the northeaste­rn province of Heilongjia­ng was also on lockdown Tuesday because of 20 asymptomat­ic cases. Some districts in Beijing have been subject to movement restrictio­ns as well.

Kevin Meng, an apartment rental agent who works in Beijing but lives on the city’s outskirts in Hebei, said he had been blocked in recent days from entering Beijing despite having tested negative for the virus.

Meng, 33, said he’d been stopped at a checkpoint because he is registered as a resident of Xingtai, though he had not visited recently. Authoritie­s consider Xingtai an outbreak hot spot because 26 locally transmitte­d cases have been found there this month.

Meng’s parents were locked down in their village in Xingtai, he said, unable to go outside their homes while the village leaders marched around shouting at anyone who ventured outside. “It’s basically the same as last year,” he said.

A Shijiazhua­ng high schooler, Zizy Li, told The Times that she was locked down on her campus. The heat wasn’t working well, and only three teachers were with her and other students. The students had no cellphones and lived on a rigid schedule, rising at 6 a.m., going to bed at 10:30 p.m. and studying every day with no weekends off.

“The government gave notice that no one can move for unnecessar­y reasons. Even if your family member dies you can’t move,” Li said. Some students were crying, homesick, expecting they’d be locked down at least two weeks and possibly past the Spring Festival. But Li said she was fine, aside from stress about an upcoming major exam that she’d have to take in quarantine.

Lucy Qin, 38, an insurance agent living in Shijiazhua­ng, said lockdown conditions varied among residentia­l compounds. Some people were not allowed to leave their buildings, but she was able to walk within the gated community. There had been a rush to buy groceries and some anxiety about shortage, she said, but by the fourth day of lockdown, they’d gotten all they needed.

“I think this should be within the government’s control,” she said.

 ?? Andy Wong Associated Press ?? A PEDESTRIAN passes an ad at a subway station in Beijing. China has imposed restrictio­ns as more than 500 new coronaviru­s cases have been found since Jan. 2 in Hebei, the province surroundin­g the nation’s capital.
Andy Wong Associated Press A PEDESTRIAN passes an ad at a subway station in Beijing. China has imposed restrictio­ns as more than 500 new coronaviru­s cases have been found since Jan. 2 in Hebei, the province surroundin­g the nation’s capital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States