Fast-Spreading Omicron to Test Beijing Winter Games Bubble
BEIJING (Reuters) - China’s
meticulous plans to prevent an Olympics-seeded COVID-19 outbreak by sealing all participants inside a “closed loop” for the upcoming Winter Games will be tested by the emergence of the highly infectious Omicron variant.
The country has reported only a handful of Omicron cases and has largely succeeded in containing COVID-19 since it first emerged in the central city of Wuhan two years ago, thanks to a zero-tolerance policy that includes rigorous contact tracing, strict targeted lockdowns, and travel curbs that have drastically cut international arrivals.
But more than 2,000 international athletes are set to come to China for the Games that start Feb. 4, plus 25,000 other “stakeholders”, a large number from overseas. Organizers did not say how many of those people would be in the closed loop.
Organizers believe their measures “can ensure the Winter Olympic Games and the Winter Paralympic Games can be held safely and on schedule,” Yan Jiarong, a spokesperson for the organizing committee, told a news conference last Thursday.
Restrictions at Games venues in Beijing and Zhangjiakou in neighboring Hebei province will be much tighter than those during last summer’s Tokyo Olympics.
Core to the planning is the rigidly-enforced closed loop that physically separates Games-related personnel from the local population, with overseas participants flying directly into and out of the bubble, which includes dedicated transport.