Travel restricted to tackle 'extremely severe' situation
Authorities in Beijing have described the city’s
coronavirus outbreak as “extremely severe” as dozens more cases emerged and
travel from the city was curtailed.
Additional neighbourhoods were fenced off on
Tuesday, with security checkpoints set up at residential compounds, and
high-risk people – such as close contacts of people who test positive –
prevented from leaving the city.
“The epidemic situation in the capital is extremely
severe,” Beijing city spokesman Xu Hejian warned at a press conference. “Right
now we have to take strict measures to stop the spread of Covid-19.”
More than 20 neighbourhoods in the Chinese capital
have now been designated medium risk, which means authorities can impose
stricter restrictions on the movement of people and cars and can carry out
temperature checks. Health authorities said sealed-off residences and people in
quarantine would have food and medicine delivered to them.
The outbreak is the most significant in China since
February, prompting fears of a second wave and questions over how the virus was
able to spread given severe quarantine measures taken by authorities. The
outbreak is potentially embarrassing for Beijing, which had declared victory
over the virus and ordered citizens back to work.
The capital, where measures were among the strictest
in the country, had reported no new locally transmitted cases for 56
consecutive days before a cluster of diagnoses began on Thursday. Before that
most new cases had come from Chinese nationals returning from abroad.
On Tuesday, state media appeared to push the idea
that the virus had come from abroad. Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiologist at the
Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, said the strain was most
similar to those seen in Europe, the US or Russia.
“It clearly indicates the virus strain is different
from what it was two months ago,” he told state broadcaster CGTN. “The virus
strain is the major epidemic strain in European countries. So it is from
outside China brought to Beijing.”
In a similar vein, , a deputy director at the
pathogen biology department at Wuhan University, told state media he believed
the new outbreak involved a more contagious strain of the virus than the one
that hit Wuhan at the beginning of the pandemic.
The outbreak – linked to 106 cases, including 27
reported on Tuesday – has been traced to the Xinfadi wholesale food market in
south-west Beijing’s Fengtai district, which sells thousands of tonnes of food
a day and which had been visited by more than 200,000 people since 30 May.
Samples of the virus were discovered on chopping
boards used for imported salmon at the market, fuelling speculation it had come
from abroad even though experts have said fish is unlikely to carry the disease
and any link to salmon may have been the result of cross-contamination.
The World Health Organization’s emergencies
director, Mike Ryan, said he expected Chinese authorities to publish the
genetic sequencing of the virus in Beijing and supported their efforts so far.
He said the idea that new outbreak was caused by imported salmon was not the
“primary hypothesis”.
“A cluster like this is a concern and it needs to be
investigated and controlled – and that is exactly what the Chinese authorities
are doing,” he said.
On Tuesday, Zhao Lijian, spokesman for China’s
foreign ministry, said Beijing had asked Canada to investigate parasites found
in shipments of the fish. Norwegian exporters have said China has halted salmon
imports.
After months of economic paralysis, authorities have
tried to limit lockdown measures to parts of the city and encouraged residents
to continue “life as normal,” while taking extra precautions.
Provinces as far away as Yunnan in the south have
brought in rules requiring quarantine for people returning from Beijing.
Shanghai authorities announced that all arrivals from medium– and high-risk
areas have to undergo 14 days of quarantine. Some long-distance bus routes
connecting Beijing and other provinces were suspended.
All indoor sport and entertainment venues in the
city were closed on Monday. Coaches and players from the Beijing Super League
football team, Guoan, have been tested and given a week off because their
training camp was in the same district as the outbreak source, local media
reported. In Xicheng district, which borders Fengtai, another market was shut
after a coronavirus case was confirmed. Seven neighbourhoods near the market
have been closed off.
More than 8,000 workers from the market have now
been tested and sent to centralised quarantine facilities, and other Beijing
wet markets, basement markets and more than 30,000 restaurants are being
disinfected.
Health authorities have entered what state media
termed “wartime mode” in response.
More than 76,000 nearby residents were tested on
Sunday across almost 300 testing points, authorities said, and strict measures
have been put in place, including school closures, and transport suspensions,
including ride-sharing and taxi services.
Since the first case of the virus was detected last
year in the city of Wuhan, China has reported more than 84,000 cases and more
than 4,600 people have died.
Chinese officials and state media have been quick to
defend the country amid fears of a possible second wave.
“Control measures have been in place in communities,
three officials accountable were dismissed,” said the editor-in-chief of the
Global Times, Hu Xijin. “US politicians will likely see a miracle that Beijing
can have zero new cases in a month.”
Three people have been dismissed over the outbreak,
including the head of the Xinfadi market, the local Communist party chief, and
the deputy head of the district.




