China warns against extra 'layers' of Covid-19 curbs as outbreaks widen
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China is grappling with its highest tallies of coronavirus cases since April.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
BEIJING - The Chinese authorities should take a more targeted approach to tackling Covid-19 outbreaks and rectify any extra “layers” of measures, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported on Thursday, as cities reeled under tighter curbs as cases spread.
China is grappling with its highest tallies of coronavirus cases since April, raising questions about its zero-Covid-19 policy that has frustrated the public and inflicted damage on the world’s second-largest economy. New domestic cases rose to 8,824 on Wednesday, according to health authority data.
China has repeatedly said that it would stick to the zero-Covid-19 policy despite the growing outbreaks, but pressure is growing on the central government to rein in overzealous authorities in provinces who fear being blamed for failing to contain the virus.
Thousands of government officials have been punished for various perceived failings in nearly three years of the pandemic.
“All localities will further improve the level of scientific and precise prevention and control, strive to achieve the greatest prevention and control effect at the least cost, and minimise the impact of the epidemic on economic and social development,” Xinhua reported.
It cited improvements in the implementation of measures in some major cities, such as Zhengzhou in the central province of Henan.
When infections were found in certain buildings in Zhengzhou, only the surrounding areas were closed and the entire community was not being “controlled indiscriminately”, Xinhua reported.
The economic costs of Covid-19 in China, where the virus first emerged in December 2019, are being felt in most sectors.
Haima Automobile said logistics and personnel movements at its Zhengzhou base have been heavily impacted by Covid-19 since October.
This month, Apple supplier and iPhone assembler Foxconn was rocked by discontent over stringent Covid-19 measures, with many workers fleeing the site.
In Guangzhou, a southern city of about 19 million, cases hit more than 2,000 for the third straight day on Thursday. Officials have launched mass testing, resisting a citywide lockdown for the time being. But some residents suspect a lockdown like the one endured by the financial hub of Shanghai for months this year may be coming.
A man at a nucleic acid testing site in Shanghai, China, on Nov 9.
Mr Mason Long, who works for a Guangzhou gaming company, said a full lockdown could happen, with most of the city’s 11 districts already under some form of new Covid-19 restriction.
“Panyu district just announced that it’s restricting travel in and out, so that’s three districts to announce that,” he said. “The rest of us in other districts are super worried that this will be applied to the entire city and that we’ll be facing a Shanghai-style lockdown. I personally think it could.”
Many people have already moved to other cities, or are planning to do so, he said. REUTERS


