A rash of COVID-19 cases in schools and businesses were reported Friday in areas across China after the ruling Communist Party loosened anti-virus rules as it tries to reverse a deepening economic slump.
While official data showed a fall in new
cases, they no longer cover large parts of the population after the government
on Wednesday ended mandatory testing for many people. That was part of dramatic
changes aimed at gradually emerging from “zero COVID” restrictions that have
confined millions of people to their homes and sparked protests and demands for
President Xi Jinping to resign.
“There’s very few people coming in because
there’s so many cases,” said Gang Xueping, a waitress in a Beijing restaurant. “The
country’s just opened up. The first one or two months is definitely going to be
serious. Nobody’s used to this yet.”
In other cities, social media users said
coworkers or classmates were ill and some businesses had closed due to a lack
of staff. It wasn’t clear from those accounts, many of which couldn’t be
independently confirmed, how far above the official figure the total case
numbers might be.
“I’m really speechless. Half of the
company’s people are out sick, but they still won’t let us all stay home,” said
a post signed Tunnel Mouth on the popular Sina Weibo platform. The user gave no
name and didn’t respond to questions sent through the account, which said the
user was in Beijing.
The reports echo the experience of the
United States, Europe and other countries that have struggled with outbreaks
while trying to restore business activity. But they are a jarring change for
China, where “zero COVID,” which aims to isolate every case, disrupted daily
life and depressed economic activity but kept infection rates low.
Xi’s government began to loosen controls
Nov. 11 after promising to reduce their cost and disruption. Imports tumbled
10.9% from a year ago in November in a sign of weak demand. Auto sales fell
26.5% in October.
“Relaxing COVID controls will lead to
greater outbreaks,” Neil Thomas and Laura Gloudeman of Eurasia Group said in a
report. “But Beijing is unlikely to return to the extended blanket lockdowns
that crashed the economy earlier this year.”
The changes suggest the ruling party is
easing off its goal of preventing virus transmission, the basis of “zero
COVID,” but officials say that strategy still is in effect.
Restrictions probably must stay in place at
least through mid-2023, public health experts and economists say. They say
millions of elderly people need to be vaccinated, which will take months, and
hospitals need to be strengthened to cope with a surge in cases. Officials
announced a vaccination campaign last week.
On Friday, the government reported 16,797
new cases, including 13,160 without symptoms. That was down about one-fifth
from the previous day and less than half of last week’s daily peak above
40,000.
More changes announced Wednesday allow
people with mild COVID-19 cases to isolate at home instead of going to a
quarantine center that some complained were crowded and unsanitary. That
addressed a major irritant for the public.
A requirement for subway riders,
supermarket shoppers and others to show negative virus tests also was dropped,
though they still are needed for schools and hospitals.
A post signed Where Dreams Begin Under
Starlight by a user in Dazhou, a southwestern city in Sichuan province, said
all but five students in a public school class of 46 were infected.
“It’s really amazing that the school
insists students go to school,” the user wrote. The user, contacted through the
account, declined to give a name or other details.
The requirement for hundreds of millions of
people to be tested as often as once a day in some areas over the past two
years helped the government spot infections with no symptoms. Ending that
approach reduces the cost of monitoring employees and customers at offices,
shops and other businesses. But it increases the risk they might spread the
virus.
This week’s changes follow protests that
erupted Nov. 25 in Shanghai, Beijing and other cities against the human cost of
“zero COVID.”
It isn’t clear whether any of the changes
were a response to the protests, which died out following a security crackdown.
The ruling party’s Politburo on Wednesday
declared stabilizing weak economic growth its priority, though leaders have
said local officials still are expected to protect the public.
“The re-pivot to growth and the exit from
zero COVID are clear from the top level,” said Larry Hu and Yuxiao Zhang of Macquarie
Group, an Australian bank, in a report. However, they warned, “uncertainties
remain high,” including “how disruptive the exit of zero COVID could be.”
Party leaders stopped talking about the
official 5.5% annual growth target after the economy shrank by 2.6% from the
previous quarter in the three months ending in June. That was after Shanghai
and other industrial centers shut down for up to two months to fight outbreaks.
Private sector economists have cut
forecasts of annual growth to as low as below 3%, which would be less than half
of last year’s 8.1% and among the weakest in decades.
Social media posts suggested some cities
might have outbreaks that weren’t reflected in official figures.
Posts dated Thursday by 18 people who said
they were in Baoding, a city of 11 million southwest of Beijing, reported they
tested positive using home kits or had fevers, sore throats and headaches.
Meanwhile, the Baoding city government reported no new cases since Tuesday.
Drugstores were mobbed by customers who
bought medications to treat sore throats and headaches after rules were dropped
that required pharmacists to report those purchases, prompting fears a customer
might be forced into a quarantine center.
Also Friday, the market regulator announced
prices of some medicines including Lianhua Qingwen, a traditional flu
treatment, rose as much as 500% over the past month. It said sellers might be
punished for price gouging.
Lines formed outside hospitals, though it
wasn’t clear how many people wanted treatment for COVID-19 symptoms.
People waited four to five hours to get
into the fever clinic of Chaoyang Hospital in Beijing, according to a woman who
answered the phone there and would give only her surname, Sun. She said no
virus test was required but patients had to show a smartphone “health code” app
that tracks their vaccine status and whether they have been to areas deemed at
high risk of infection.
Hong Kong, which enforces its own
anti-virus strategy, has faced a similar rise in cases as the southern Chinese
city tries to revive its struggling economy by loosening controls on travel and
the opening hours of restaurants and pubs.
Hong Kong reported 75,000 new cases over
the past week, up about 25% from the previous week. But those don’t include an
unknown number of people who stay at home with COVID-19 symptoms and never
report to the government. -AP