BEIJING (AP)-Teams wearing white protective suits are entering the homes of people infected with the virus to spray disinfectant as Shanghai tries to end the Omicron epidemic using strict “zero-COVID” China’s strategy.
City spokesman Jin Chen said Tuesday that older communities with bathrooms and kitchens will also be disinfected in the homes of everyone else who uses those facilities. He tried to raise public concern about damage to clothing and valuables, saying residents could inform teams of anything in need of protection.
Shanghai also suspended the last two subway lines still operating on Tuesday, the first time the city’s entire system has been shut down, according to online media The Paper.
The latest size came from the same Shanghai People sorted in several districts that I still stay at home with after releasing some with limited purchases in recent weeks. The latest measures have further angered residents who hope the one-month lockout will eventually be eased as the number of new cases in the city drops.
Most of the city with 25 million appears to be confined to its apartments or housing, although there has been little comfort in the suburbs, with no new opportunities in their communities. An AP video taken Monday showed a quiet and deserted city where a random car and only a few waiters were driving on deserted streets.
The daily number of new cases in Shanghai dropped to nearly 3,000 on Monday, from 26,000 in mid-April. Authorities are blocking much of the city as they try to stop the spread of the virus, though many other parts of the world are removing restrictions and trying to settle them. Six more COVID -related deaths were reported in China’s largest city, bringing the death toll to 553.
Beijing, the capital, launched another three-day mass test round on Tuesday for its millions of residents to prevent an epidemic of Shanghai proportions. The city, which reported 74 new cases on Monday, closed individual buildings and condominiums, closed about 60 meters of the station and banned canteens in restaurants, allowing only delivery and delivery. .
Beijing authorities said there were no lockouts in the city, but there was work to order from home and restaurants were closed.
Asia correspondent Tom Cheshire will take us on a tour around town to see what life is like in China’s “shadow block”.
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Shanghai originally ordered mass testing with limited locking, but that expanded as the number of cases increased. Thousands of residents were forcibly evacuated to centralized quarantine centers after testing positive or having contact with an infected person.
Reports published in some districts in recent days say residents have been asked to stay home and not receive non -essential supplies as part of a “period of silence” that will last at least until Wednesday. . Measurements can be extended based on mass test results, the state of messages. The sudden restriction, after several initial openings, surprised the population.
Associated Press researchers Xi Chen in Shanghai and Yu Bing in Beijing.
Source: Huffpost