Shanghai starts coming back to life as COVID lockdown finally eases
SHANGHAI — Vehicles, pedestrians and joggers reappeared on the streets of Shanghai on Wednesday as China’s largest city began returning to normality amid the easing of a strict two-month COVID-19 lockdown that has drawn unusual protests over its heavy-handed implementation.
Shanghai’s Communist Party committee, the city’s most powerful political body, issued an online letter proclaiming the lockdown’s success and thanking citizens for their “support and contributions.” The move came after a steady rollback of restrictions that have upended daily life for millions while severely disrupting the economy and global supply chains.
While defending President Xi Jinping’s hard-line zero-tolerance policy, the country’s leadership appears to be acknowledging the public backlash against measures seen as trampling already severely limited rights to privacy and participation in the workings of government.
In one such step, the Cabinet’s Joint Prevention and Control Mechanism issued a letter Tuesday laying out rules banning “non-standard, simple and rude indoor disinfection” by mostly untrained teams in Shanghai and elsewhere that have left homes damaged and led to reports of property theft.
Full bus and subway service in Shanghai was being restored from Wednesday, with rail connections to the rest of China to follow. Still, more than half a million people in the city of 25 million remain under lockdown or in designated control zones because coronavirus cases are still being detected.
The government says all restrictions will be gradually lifted, but local neighborhood committees still wield considerable power to implement sometimes conflicting and arbitrary policies. Negative PCR tests for COVID-19 taken within the previous 48 hours also remain standard in Shanghai, Beijing and elsewhere for permission to enter public venues.
China is trying to tackle its biggest coronavirus outbreak without a tool it could have adopted months ago: Western-developed mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.
That measure didn’t deter people in Shanghai from gathering outside to eat and drink under the watch of police deployed to discourage large crowds from forming.
“With the lockdown lifting, I feel very happy. I feel today how I feel during Chinese New Year — that kind of mood and joy,” said Wang Xiaowei, 34, who moved to Shanghai from the inland province of Guizhou just a week before the lockdown began.
Liu Ruilin, 18, said she wasn’t sure her building’s security guard would let her and others out Tuesday night. The restriction ended exactly at midnight, she said.
“Then we said, ‘Let’s go to the Bund to have fun,’” she said, referring to the city’s historic riverside promenade and district. “We thought there wouldn’t be too many people here, but we were surprised after coming over that a lot of people are here. I feel pretty good — quite excited.”
As Xi Jinping prepares for a third term as China’s president, he must confront COVID, a slowing economy and other issues that threaten his hold on power
Schools will partially reopen on a voluntary basis, and shopping malls, supermarkets, convenience stores and drugstores will gradually reopen at no more than 75% of their total capacity. Cinemas and gyms will remain closed.
Health authorities on Wednesday reported just 15 new coronavirus cases in Shanghai, down from a record high of around 20,000 daily cases in April.
The lockdown has prompted an exodus of Chinese and foreign residents, with crowds forming outside the city’s Hongqiao Railway Station, where only some train services have resumed.
Even while the rest of the world has opened up, China has stuck to a draconian strategy that requires lockdowns, mass testing and isolation at centralized facilities for anyone who is infected or has been in contact with someone who has tested positive.
China’s leaders are clinging to their disastrous zero-COVID policy, because it worked in 2020. The regime’s authoritarian structure makes it very hard to change once a number is set.
The country’s borders also remain largely closed, and the government has upped requirements for the issuance of passports and permission to travel abroad.
At least half of foreign companies in Shanghai are waiting until next week to reopen while they put in place hygiene measures, said Bettina Schoen-Behanzin, a vice president of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China. As a precaution, many companies plan to have only half their workforce on site at a time.
“There is still quite some uncertainty and a scare that, if there is a positive case in the office building or in your compound, you might be locked down again,” said Schoen-Behanzin, who works in Shanghai.
The strict restrictions in Shanghai, the country’s commercial capital and home of the world’s busiest port, dragged down Chinese economic activity and disrupted global manufacturing and trade.
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Retail sales fell by a worse-than-forecast 11% in April from a year earlier, government data show. Auto sales fell by almost half from a year earlier, according to the China Assn. of Automobile Manufacturers.
Private sector forecasters have cut their estimates for this year’s economic growth to as low as 2%, well below the ruling Communist Party’s target of 5.5%. Some expect output to shrink in the three months ending in June.
“The economy is really in a crisis,” said Schoen-Behanzin.
The Port of Shanghai, the world’s busiest, appears to be back to 80% to 85% of its normal operating capacity, according to Schoen-Behanzin. She cited data that said the port had a backlog of 260,000 cargo containers in April.
The top U.N. human rights official says she raised concerns with Chinese officials about the rights of Uyghurs in China’s Xinjiang region.
“The rest of the world will feel these delays probably [through] June or July,” she said.
The city will likely see a “mass exodus” of foreign residents this summer, “especially families with small kids,” Schoen-Behanzin said. She said about half of Shanghai’s foreign residents had already left over the past two years.
“People are really fed up with these lockdowns,” she said. “It’s not safe, especially if you have small children.”
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