Beijing: People queue to test for coronavirus at a swab collection station on Sunday.—AFP
Beijing: People queue to test for coronavirus at a swab collection station on Sunday.—AFP

BEIJING: Amid rising coronavirus cases despite a stringent zero-Covid policy, China reported the first Covid death in Beijing on Sunday in six months.

Municipal officials announced an 87-year-old man had died in the capital, while 621 new local cases had been detected in Beijing on Sunday.

The last major economy still welded to a no-tolerance policy on the virus, China has enforced snap lockdowns, mass testing and quarantines even as the rest of the world adjusts to living with Covid.

The National Health Commission also said it had recorded more than 24,000 local infections across the nation in the previous 24 hours.

While the tallies are low compared with most other countries, the latest announcements follow a recent uptick in cases in China after months of few infections being reported.

The announcements also come after Beijing declared its most significant easing of coronavirus measures to date on November 11.

Among the steps to ease the controls was a reduction of compulsory quarantine ti­m­es for international arrivals.

Days later, multiple Chin­ese cities cancelled mass Covid tests, raising hopes of an eventual reopening.

But the limited relaxation has not marked a reversal of zero-Covid, which has left China internationally isolated, wreaked havoc on the economy, and sparked protests in a country where dissent is routinely crushed.

Parks, gyms closed

Beijing has in recent days moved to confine some residents to their homes and ordered others to quarantine centres.

More than 8,000 new daily cases were reported in the southern manufacturing hub of Guangzhou on Sunday, prompting officials to launch a general Covid screening in the central district of Haizhu that is home to about 1.8 million people.

Guangzhou was the scene of furious protests and clashes with police last week over a renewed lockdown.

In another sign that China’s reopening may yet be waylaid, Beijing officials repeated their call to residents to avoid “non-imperative” travel between districts to avoid spreading the virus.

Some of Beijing’s largest shopping malls were closed on Sunday, while others reduced opening hours or banned table service at restaurants.

Several offices in the business and diplomatic hub of Chaoyang District asked companies to tell their employees to work from home.

Some parks and gyms have also closed.

The number of cases “is seeing a significant rise”, Beijing municipality spokesman Xu Hejian said on Sunday.

“The situation of epidemic prevention and control in the capital is grim,” he said.

Published in Dawn, November 21st, 2022

Opinion

Editorial

At heat’s mercy
Updated 28 Apr, 2025

At heat’s mercy

The current heatwave is a dire warning of what lies ahead if Pakistan fails to confront the realities of climate change.
Culture war
28 Apr, 2025

Culture war

THE heightened tensions between India and Pakistan have sealed the fate of Abir Gulaal. Slated for a May release and...
Haj mismanagement
28 Apr, 2025

Haj mismanagement

THE relevant authorities in Pakistan are often blamed for negligence and poor management when it comes to Haj...
From gains to gaps
27 Apr, 2025

From gains to gaps

AS we mark World Immunisation Week 2025 — themed ‘Immunisation for All is Humanly Possible’ — we are faced...
Crisis talks
Updated 28 Apr, 2025

Crisis talks

Sense needs to be restored so that the Pahalgam attack may be independently investigated and the victims given justice.
BYC women in jail
27 Apr, 2025

BYC women in jail

THE detained Baloch Yakjehti Committee leader Mahrang Baloch and other BYC activists, including women, are reported...