Beijing Launches Testing for All 21 Million Residents
BEIJING (AFP) – Beijing on Tuesday launched mass coronavirus testing for nearly all its 21 million residents, as fears grew that the Chinese capital may be placed under a strict lockdown like Shanghai.
China is trying to contain a wave of infections in Shanghai -- its biggest city -- which has been almost entirely locked down for weeks and reported 52 new Covid deaths on Tuesday.
Beijing authorities have ordered people in 12 central districts that account for most of its population to undergo three rounds of PCR testing after the detection of dozens of cases in the city in recent days.
The capital’s most populous downtown district, Chaoyang, was the first to order mass testing from Monday, with people waiting in long lines to be swabbed by health workers in protective gear.
Eleven more districts began testing on Tuesday.
The testing order for Chaoyang sparked panic buying from Sunday night, with residents lining up at supermarkets with full carts and bulging shopping bags as state media tried to reassure the public that there were plentiful supplies.
Beijing residents told AFP they feared a repeat of the sudden lockdown in Shanghai, where people have struggled to obtain food and medical care for non-Covid conditions.
City health official Xu Hejian said Monday that the spread of the virus in Beijing was still “within the scope of control”.
The capital reported 33 new cases on Tuesday, a fraction of Shanghai’s daily tally of 16,000.
But Beijing officials are anxious to avoid a spiraling outbreak.
They have urged companies to allow employees to work from home, sealed off multiple residential areas and suspended local group tourism ahead of the long May 1 national holiday.
Authorities urged Beijing residents not to leave the city for these holidays unless necessary.
Beijing’s measures are mild, however, compared with actions taken elsewhere, Pinpoint Asset Management chief economist Zhiwei Zhang said in a note.
“I am surprised that the government did not impose restrictive policies in Beijing as harshly and quickly as in other cities that experienced similar outbreaks in recent weeks,” he wrote.
Under its zero-Covid policy, China has used strict lockdowns, mass testing and severe travel restrictions to stamp out infections.
But authorities are increasingly struggling with the impact of these protocols on the economy and business morale, especially when outbreaks appear in the country’s most important cities.