Hazmat suits and panic buying: pandemic images return to China
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
Shanghai
A SHANGHAI pedestrian swarmed by hazmat-clad health officials, police tape wrapped around entire blocks, and panic buying at a Shenzhen shopping centre: China is returning to virus controls many hoped it had long left behind.
The country is facing its worst Covid-19 outbreak since the first wave of the pandemic emerged in Wuhan in late 2019.
While the daily caseload is comparatively small - around 5,300 were recorded on Tuesday (Mar 15) - the Omicron variant is shaking Beijing's "zero-Covid" strategy, and that means the return of mass testing and tough restrictions on movement.
Shanghai's famous waterfront, usually buzzing with tourists and locals, fell quiet this week as the authorities moved to stamp out a rise in Covid cases in China's biggest city.
Just a handful of masked pedestrians snapped pictures of the skyline as workers were told to stay home, students turned to online classes, and restaurant dining was banned in some districts.
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
Instead of an all-out lockdown - imposed in other cities across China during a recent virus resurgence - Shanghai restrictions were targeted at squashing clusters in specific zones, but it has left residents picking through a web of local edicts.
A restaurant owner in central Shanghai said: "We were informed last night to suspend (dine-in service) and we'll obey, otherwise we would have to shut down if they found out."
In a neighbouring district, another restaurant owner said the measures were already putting people off eating out. "We don't have many customers these days," he said, adding that anxiety is running high.
On Douyin, China's version of TikTok, one would-be restaurateur complained that the dine-in ban was announced just as she had rented new premises. "I'm literally going to cry," she said.
In Shenzhen, the southern city of 17.5 million people where a harsher lockdown has been imposed, social media videos showed panic buying in supermarkets; shelves were fast emptying.
Large red plastic barricades blocked access to many compounds and lines metastasised in the gaps between high-rise buildings as mass PCR testing was rolled out.
China's harsh Covid controls have generally enjoyed support from citizens: the official death toll has remained low and, after the chaotic first outbreak in Wuhan in 2020, life has largely returned to normal.
"Now I'm used to (the control measures), it's been a long time," Beijing resident Yan Zhiping said. "As long as we protect ourselves well, there won't be problems."
But the frequency of Covid restrictions has started to grate on some, as debate rises over whether Beijing should adjust its unrelenting zero-Covid policy, especially in the face of the highly transmissible yet less-severe Omicron variant.
In Shanghai, one resident complained online that the city had done "a bad job", accusing the government of blocking people from posting negative comments.
"Preventing and controlling the virus accurately in Shanghai is just a joke, an extremely irresponsible joke," fumed another. AFP
READ MORE: Too early to speculate about secondary sanctions on China: economists
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
StarHub hands Ensign InfoSecurity control back to Temasek in S$115 million deal, books S$200 million gain
Singaporeans can now buy record amount of yen per Singdollar
Air India asks Tata, Singapore Airlines for funds after US$2.4 billion loss
Keppel DC Reit posts 13.2% higher Q1 DPU of S$0.02833 on strong portfolio performance