Viet Nam News

Some in Shanghai come out for air as Beijing resumes tests

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Some of Shanghai's 25 million people came out for brief walks and grocery shopping yesterday after enduring more than a month under a COVID lockdown, while China's capital Beijing embarked on another round of mass testing to control a nascent outbreak.

Social media posts showed Shanghai residents strolling in their suburbs, or queuing up at supermarke­ts that had been allowed to reopen. One picture showed two women carrying a pole with four bulky bags of groceries on their shoulders.

That was the result of an incrementa­l easing of curbs in five of the city's 16 districts from Sunday, home to about a fifth of Shanghai's population, where some people were allowed to leave their housing compounds for the first time in weeks.

The level of the restrictio­ns varied from one residentia­l complex to another. In many compounds, a single person from each household could go out at a time, for a maximum three hours.

Most do not get permission to drive or even ride a bike, prompting jokes on social media.

One Wechat page used to organise group orders for basic necessitie­s during the lockdown listed a donkey priced at 88,888 yuan (US$13,450) with a delivery date set after 365 years as an alternativ­e to using vehicles to transport groceries.

"Please count me in for one of those donkey group buys," one resident commented to the post.

In China, the number eight is associated with prosperity.

Increasing­ly out of step with most other countries which have significan­tly eased or even completely lifted coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, China has given no hint of deviating from its "zero COVID" policy.

China has accepted a heavy economic cost and demanded huge personal sacrifices from millions forced into prolonged isolation.

Many of these people have struggled with lost income, difficulty sourcing food and severe delays in access to emergency healthcare and other basic services.

Chinese authoritie­s say their COVID policies aim to save as many lives as possible, pointing to the millions of deaths COVID has caused outside China.

Authoritie­s reported 20 new COVID deaths on May 2, all in Shanghai, taking China's total to 5,112 since the pandemic began.

Capital tightens curbs

Beijing, with dozens of new cases daily in an outbreak in its second week, is banking on mass testing to locate and isolate infections and avert a Shanghai-like lockdown.

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