Beijing Shuts Parks, Shanghai Tightens Entry as China COVID Cases
Rise
Parks and museums
have been closed in Beijing while Shanghai has tightened rules for people
entering China’s financial hub as authorities grapple with a spike in COVID-19
cases and growing concerns about the economy.
China reported 28,127
new domestically transmitted cases on Monday, close to its daily peak from
April. About half of the total infections are in the southern city of Guangzhou
and the southwestern municipality of Chongqing.
Cases in the capital,
Beijing, have also been hitting new highs every day, which prompted the city’s
government to ask residents to stay put and show proof of a negative COVID
test, not more than 48 hours old, to get into public buildings.
On Tuesday, Shanghai
ordered the closure of cultural and entertainment venues in seven of its 16
districts after reporting 48 new local infections while the city of Tianjin
near Beijing became the latest to order citywide testing.
Authorities in
Shanghai said on Tuesday that the city will tighten rules for people entering
beginning on Thursday to combat the recent rise in COVID-19 infections.
People who have
stayed in Shanghai for fewer than five days will not be allowed to enter public
places such as restaurants, bars, shopping malls, supermarkets and indoor gyms,
according to a statement published by the Shanghai administration.
They can still go to
offices and use public transport, the city government said.
‘Zero-COVID’ test
China has recently
introduced adjustments to its ‘“zero-COVID” policy,
leading authorities to order clampdown measures but
avoid blanket lockdowns, which have strangled the economy and frustrated
residents nearly three years into the pandemic.
China still remains a
global outlier with its strict COVID restrictions, including borders that
remain all but shut.
Despite relaxing some
measures, including cutting quarantine for international arrivals from seven to
five days, Beijing has repeatedly ruled out a fundamental shift away from “zero
COVID” even as public frustrations
with the policy mount.
President Xi
Jinping’s government argues that the strict policy saves lives and is necessary
to prevent the healthcare system from becoming overwhelmed, especially for
elderly people who have yet to be vaccinated.
Lockdown frustration
Last week, the main
campus of Peking University in Beijing was locked down.
Students and staff at the university were told they would not be allowed to
leave the grounds unless absolutely necessary and classes were moved online at
one campus until Friday, according to a notice from the university.
The latest round of
lockdowns has already turned frustration into anger with protests in a district
of the southern city of Guangzhou last week.
Many social media
users drew a comparison with maskless fans at the
football World Cup,
which began on Sunday in Qatar.
“Tens of thousands in
Qatar don’t wear masks, and we are still panicking,” wrote one user on the
Weibo platform.