The Guardian (USA)

Beijing reopens mass isolation centre in fight against Covid

- Helen Davidson in Taipei and agencies

Beijing has reopened a mass isolation centre as authoritie­s seek to contain an outbreak of Covid-19 in the city.

The Xiaotangsh­an Fangcai hospital, which holds at least 1,200 beds and testing facilities, was first opened during the 2003 Sars epidemic, and used again in early 2020 to treat Covid patients. Its reopening signals a ramp up in efforts by China’s capital to manage the rising number of cases without going into a city-wide lockdown.

On Wednesday, China reported 5,489 cases, including 353 symptomati­c. Most (4,982) were in Shanghai, which has been under a weeks-long lockdown sparking widespread complaints and protests over food shortages and overzealou­s enforcemen­t. Beijing reported 46 symptomati­c cases and five asymptomat­ic on Wednesday, bringing the city’s total since the start of its Omicron

outbreak to about 400.

As Shanghai’s case numbers soared into the thousands, authoritie­s raced to identify and isolate every case, regardless of severity. Hundreds of thousands were transferre­d to temporary hospitals, requisitio­ned office buildings and residentia­l blocks, and repurposed convention centres. Conditions in some facilities prompted complaints, with bright lights 24/7, limited water and unsanitary conditions.

In a statement the Beijing Municipal Health Commission said it had reopened the Xiaotangsh­an hospital as a precaution, describing the battle against the Omicron spread as a chess game. It said one isolation unit was already operating, with 40 medical personnel treating 12 people with asymptomat­ic or mild cases.

Ahead of the five-day May Day holiday, authoritie­s last week imposed some community-specific lockdowns, movement restrictio­ns, and closed entertainm­ent and public venues, including Universal Beijing Resort. Restaurant­s have been banned from offering dine-in services, and on Wednesday the city announced dozens of undergroun­d train stations and more than 150 bus routes would be closed from midnight. It is running frequent mass testings of millions of residents, with 12 of the 16 Beijing districts conducting the second of three rounds this week, having done three mass screenings last week.

Cases are being recorded across multiple cities and provinces in China, with hundreds of millions of people under some form of full or partial lockdown. In Henan province, the city of Zhengzhou announced movement restrictio­ns from 4-10 May, including remote schooling and some working

from home. Henan reported 12 symptomati­c and 38 asymptomat­ic cases on Wednesday.

China’s Communist party government has committed to a zero-Covid policy, which analysts say is now so entrenched in politics there is no sign of a way out. Currently, health authoritie­s have said China cannot reopen as its vaccinatio­n rates – especially among elderly people – are too low, and the country’s distributi­on of health resources inequitabl­e. However, the more transmissi­ble strain of Omicron has challenged the zero-Covid playbook. Beijing authoritie­s appear to be hoping they acted early enough to avoid a Shanghaist­yle crisis.

The lockdown in Shanghai has begun to lift in some areas, but most people remain unable to leave their housing compounds. Residents have reported numerous cases of overzealou­s or incompeten­t action by health workers. Viral videos on social media this week have shown protective suit-wearing workers kicking down the door of a home where the residents said they were still waiting for a test result. A video of mortuary workers collecting the body of an aged care home resident who had been declared dead, but discoverin­g they were still alive, also sparked alarm.

There have also been major concerns over the way deaths are reported, with the official toll far lower than believed. The low reporting is due to China’s strict regulation­s on attributin­g Covid-19 as a cause of death when there are other factors, but the reporting of some fatalities has caused confusion.

The zero-Covid policy is also hurting domestic consumptio­n and factory output, disrupting key global supply chains and shrinking revenues for some of the biggest internatio­nal brands, such as Apple, Gucci-parent Kering and Taco Bell-owner Yum China.

Capital Economics estimates the virus has spread to areas generating 40% of China’s output and 80% of its exports – all facing various degrees of restrictio­ns.

 ?? Photograph: VCG/Getty Images ?? Volunteers wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) gesture at a makeshift nucleic acid testing site in Beijing
Photograph: VCG/Getty Images Volunteers wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) gesture at a makeshift nucleic acid testing site in Beijing

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States