November 5, 2024
CCP Shortens Quarantines But Continues Zero-COVID Policy

Authored by Alex Wu via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Pedestrians walk on the Bund opposite Lujiazui Financial Center in Shanghai, China, on June 10, 2022, amid preparations for city wide COVID-19 testing. (Liu Jin/AFP via Getty Images)

The Chinese communist regime announced on Nov. 11 that it would relax some COVID-19 restrictions, but said it won’t change its zero-COVID policy. Meanwhile, the regime has been implementing more lockdowns in its southern megacity of Guangzhou.

The regime’s State Council and the National Health Commission announced 20 relaxation measures for COVID-19 epidemic control on Friday, including reducing the seven-day centralized quarantine to five days of at-home quarantine. It also canceled the controversial circuit breaker mechanism for inbound flights and reduce the two negative PCR test results within 48 hours needed before boarding a flight to one.

Despite the relaxation, China’s COVID-19 restrictions are still the most restrictive in the world, while other governments have basically allowed their residents to return to normal life.

Also on Nov. 11, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Zhao Lijian said at a press briefing that the regime will continue to “unswervingly implement the general policy of ‘zero-COVID.’”

This policy has weighed greatly on China’s economic development, and brought immense suffering and countless tragedies to the Chinese people. It has also triggered increasing domestic opposition to the government policies for strict COVID-19 control measures.

Aviation ground crew wearing personal protective equipment working on an aircraft that flew in from abroad at the airport in Yantai in China’s eastern Shandong province on Sept. 18, 2022. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)

At the same time, the CCP’s official media have published commentaries blaming local authorities for the improper role-out of COVID-19 control measures while they are implementing CCP leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policies.

Regarding the relaxation of some of the control measures, China Affair commentator Zhou Xiaohui pointed out in his column for The Epoch Times, “In the face of an increasingly uncontrollable situation, life under COVID-19 control has become increasingly unbearable for the people. And in a worsening social atmosphere, Xi and the communist regime had to loosen their grip a little to reduce public grievances and the domestic crisis that the regime may usher in by shifting the blame to the local authorities.”

International media, such as The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg, citing analysts, also warned that the international community shouldn’t be overly optimistic about the relaxation, as the changes are just minor adjustments. They anticipate the Chinese regime’s “zero-COVID” policy will continue indefinitely.

Locking Down Another Megacity

Meanwhile, the Chinese regime continues to lockdown more cities and conduct mass COVID-19 testing.

Guangzhou, the provincial capital of Guangdong in south China, is now on the brink of a city-wide lockdown, with millions of residents undergoing mass testing and being shut in at home.

Haizhu District in the city has already been locked down since Nov. 11, according to official notice. All residents in the district must stay at home and undergo regular mass PRC testing.

One person in each household is allowed to go out once every day to buy basic necessities nearby.

Residents queue to undergo PCR testing for COVID-19 at a swab collection site in Guangzhou, in China’s southern Guangdong Province in August 2022. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)

Public transportation has been suspended, including subways, buses, taxis, and online car-hailing services. The entrances and exits of the highways in Haizhu District are closed, and temporary traffic control has been implemented across the district.

Mr. Chen (pseudonym), the owner of a barbecue restaurant in Haizhu District of Guangzhou City, has five or six employees who live in two dormitories. He told The Epoch Times on Nov. 11, “My restaurant is not allowed to open; food and supplies have not been distributed to us; only the large supermarkets can stay opened, which will have a great impact on the economy.”

Chen said that after the lockdown notice was issued, everyone went out to shop to stock up on food. “There are a lot of people shopping, and if they are slow, the goods will be gone, such as green vegetables are no longer available for grabs.”

Since Nov. 10, a number of high-risk areas and temporary control areas have been added to the lockdown list in other districts of Guangzhou.

Mr. Zhao (pseudonym), the owner of an art studio in Baiyun District of Guangzhou, told The Epoch Times on Nov. 11 that there have been COVID-19 cases reported in various districts in Guangzhou, and basically every village has shut down and many businesses have been suspended for almost a month.

“There are basically barriers on the streets everywhere to blockade various neighborhoods, no more than 500 meters (0.3 mile) away from each other,” Zhao described.

Xiao Lusheng and Gu Xiaohua contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden Mon, 11/14/2022 - 11:05

Authored by Alex Wu via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Pedestrians walk on the Bund opposite Lujiazui Financial Center in Shanghai, China, on June 10, 2022, amid preparations for city wide COVID-19 testing. (Liu Jin/AFP via Getty Images)

The Chinese communist regime announced on Nov. 11 that it would relax some COVID-19 restrictions, but said it won’t change its zero-COVID policy. Meanwhile, the regime has been implementing more lockdowns in its southern megacity of Guangzhou.

The regime’s State Council and the National Health Commission announced 20 relaxation measures for COVID-19 epidemic control on Friday, including reducing the seven-day centralized quarantine to five days of at-home quarantine. It also canceled the controversial circuit breaker mechanism for inbound flights and reduce the two negative PCR test results within 48 hours needed before boarding a flight to one.

Despite the relaxation, China’s COVID-19 restrictions are still the most restrictive in the world, while other governments have basically allowed their residents to return to normal life.

Also on Nov. 11, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Zhao Lijian said at a press briefing that the regime will continue to “unswervingly implement the general policy of ‘zero-COVID.’”

This policy has weighed greatly on China’s economic development, and brought immense suffering and countless tragedies to the Chinese people. It has also triggered increasing domestic opposition to the government policies for strict COVID-19 control measures.

Aviation ground crew wearing personal protective equipment working on an aircraft that flew in from abroad at the airport in Yantai in China’s eastern Shandong province on Sept. 18, 2022. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)

At the same time, the CCP’s official media have published commentaries blaming local authorities for the improper role-out of COVID-19 control measures while they are implementing CCP leader Xi Jinping’s “zero-COVID” policies.

Regarding the relaxation of some of the control measures, China Affair commentator Zhou Xiaohui pointed out in his column for The Epoch Times, “In the face of an increasingly uncontrollable situation, life under COVID-19 control has become increasingly unbearable for the people. And in a worsening social atmosphere, Xi and the communist regime had to loosen their grip a little to reduce public grievances and the domestic crisis that the regime may usher in by shifting the blame to the local authorities.”

International media, such as The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg, citing analysts, also warned that the international community shouldn’t be overly optimistic about the relaxation, as the changes are just minor adjustments. They anticipate the Chinese regime’s “zero-COVID” policy will continue indefinitely.

Locking Down Another Megacity

Meanwhile, the Chinese regime continues to lockdown more cities and conduct mass COVID-19 testing.

Guangzhou, the provincial capital of Guangdong in south China, is now on the brink of a city-wide lockdown, with millions of residents undergoing mass testing and being shut in at home.

Haizhu District in the city has already been locked down since Nov. 11, according to official notice. All residents in the district must stay at home and undergo regular mass PRC testing.

One person in each household is allowed to go out once every day to buy basic necessities nearby.

Residents queue to undergo PCR testing for COVID-19 at a swab collection site in Guangzhou, in China’s southern Guangdong Province in August 2022. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)

Public transportation has been suspended, including subways, buses, taxis, and online car-hailing services. The entrances and exits of the highways in Haizhu District are closed, and temporary traffic control has been implemented across the district.

Mr. Chen (pseudonym), the owner of a barbecue restaurant in Haizhu District of Guangzhou City, has five or six employees who live in two dormitories. He told The Epoch Times on Nov. 11, “My restaurant is not allowed to open; food and supplies have not been distributed to us; only the large supermarkets can stay opened, which will have a great impact on the economy.”

Chen said that after the lockdown notice was issued, everyone went out to shop to stock up on food. “There are a lot of people shopping, and if they are slow, the goods will be gone, such as green vegetables are no longer available for grabs.”

Since Nov. 10, a number of high-risk areas and temporary control areas have been added to the lockdown list in other districts of Guangzhou.

Mr. Zhao (pseudonym), the owner of an art studio in Baiyun District of Guangzhou, told The Epoch Times on Nov. 11 that there have been COVID-19 cases reported in various districts in Guangzhou, and basically every village has shut down and many businesses have been suspended for almost a month.

“There are basically barriers on the streets everywhere to blockade various neighborhoods, no more than 500 meters (0.3 mile) away from each other,” Zhao described.

Xiao Lusheng and Gu Xiaohua contributed to this report.