China locks down Shanghai as mass Covid testing begins

The lockdown of the city of 26 million comes after the global financial hub reported a record 3,450 new asymptomatic Covid infections and 50 symptomatic cases.

China has continued to enforce what it calls the "dynamic zero-Covid" approach, calling that the most economical and effective prevention strategy against Covid-19.
Reuters

China has continued to enforce what it calls the "dynamic zero-Covid" approach, calling that the most economical and effective prevention strategy against Covid-19.

China has begun locking down most of its largest city of Shanghai as a coronavirus outbreak surges and amid questions about the economic toll of the nation's "zero-Covid" strategy.

Shanghai's Pudong financial district and nearby areas will be locked down from early on Monday to Friday as citywide mass testing gets under way, the local government said. In the second phase of the lockdown, the vast downtown area west of the Huangpu River that divides the city will then start its own five-day lockdown on Friday.

Residents will be required to stay home and deliveries will be left at checkpoints to ensure there is no contact with the outside world. Offices and all businesses not considered essential will be closed and public transport suspended.

Already, many communities within the city of 26 million have been locked down, with their residents required to submit to multiple tests for Covid-19. And Shanghai’s Disney theme park is among the businesses that closed earlier.

Shanghai detected another 3,500 cases of infection on Sunday, though all but 50 were people who tested positive but were not showing symptoms of Covid-19. 

China categorises such cases separately from "confirmed cases" — those in people who are sick — leading to much lower totals in daily reports.

'Dynamic zero-Covid'

In response to its biggest outbreak in two years, China has continued to enforce what it calls the "dynamic zero-Covid" approach, calling that the most economical and effective prevention strategy against Covid-19.

That requires lockdowns and mass testing, with close contacts often being quarantined at home or in a central government facility. The strategy focuses on eradicating community transmission of the virus as quickly as possible, sometimes by locking down entire cities.

With China's economic growth already slowing, the extreme measures are seen as worsening difficulties striking employment, consumption and even global supply chains.

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