Shanghai releases 6000 more people from COVID-19 observation amid lockdown

Officials warn Shanghai still doesn't have the latest surge in cases of the Omicron variant under control, despite its 'zero-tolerance' approach that has seen some residents confined to their homes.
Deliverymen wearing protective suits carry bags of food at the gate of a residential community in Shanghai. (Photo| AP)
Deliverymen wearing protective suits carry bags of food at the gate of a residential community in Shanghai. (Photo| AP)

BEIJING: Shanghai released 6,000 more people from the central facilities where they were under medical observation to guard against the coronavirus, the government said on Wednesday, though the lockdown of most of China's largest city was being maintained in its third week.

About 6.6 million people in the city of 25 million were allowed to leave their homes Tuesday, but some were restricted to their own neighbourhoods. Some housing compounds also appeared to still be keeping residents locked inside, and no further lifting of restrictions was apparent on Wednesday.

Officials warn Shanghai still doesn't have the latest surge in cases of the Omicron variant under control, despite its "zero-tolerance" approach that has seen some residents confined to their homes for three weeks or longer.

China also requires anyone who tests positive or is a close contact of such a person to spend at least a week in centralised observation centres in pre-fabricated buildings or gymnasiums and exhibition halls to limit the spread of the virus.

The city's health bureau said Wednesday that 6,044 people had been allowed the day before to leave observation centres and return home, although health monitoring will continue. The number of newly detected daily cases in the city edged upward to 26,338, all but 1,189 of them in people showing no symptoms.

With more than 200,000 total cases, the ongoing outbreak is China's biggest of the pandemic. But the mass testing has caught many asymptomatic cases, and no deaths have been reported in Shanghai. The lockdown has led to frustration among residents in Shanghai about running out of food and being unable to get deliveries.

Censors have diligently scrubbed such material from social media, while state-controlled outlets describe a successful campaign to provide food and other supplies and counselled residents that “persistence is victory".

Shanghai is also home to China's busiest port and main stock market, and concerns have been rising about the lockdown's economic impact. Figures released Wednesday showed China's exports rose 15.7 per cent in March over a year earlier while imports were flat due to disruptions from coronavirus outbreaks.

Customs data show exports rose to USD 276.1 billion despite anti-virus controls in Shanghai and other industrial centres that caused factories to reduce output.

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