BEIJING — China reported its first death from COVID-19 in six months on Sunday as it
contends with a rising outbreak despite stringent measures to eliminate
infections.
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The last major
economy still welded to stamping out COVID flare-ups, China has enforced
lockdowns, mass testing and quarantines even as the rest of the world adjusts
to living with the virus.
On Sunday,
municipal officials announced an 87-year-old man had died in Beijing as the
National Health Commission said it had recorded more than 24,000 infections
throughout the country in the previous 24 hours.
While the tally
is relatively low compared with other countries, the recent surge is notable in
China after months of few cases being announced.
On November 11,
Beijing abruptly declared its most significant easing of coronavirus controls
to date, including a reduction of quarantine times for international arrivals.
But the limited
relaxation did not desert the “zero-COVID” approach, even as it has wrecked
massive social and economic consequences.
According to
state-run CCTV, Saturday’s COVID-19 death — the first announced since May —
involved a mild case, but the elderly man’s condition worsened after a
bacterial infection.
Beijing, where
621 daily cases were reported Sunday, has confined some residents to their
homes and ordered others to quarantine centers.
Unlike during
previous outbreaks in the capital however, officials appear to be refraining
from imposing harsher restrictions on a public exhausted by exceptionally
strict COVID-19 measures.
In southern
manufacturing hub Guangzhou, one of the hotspots of the current outbreak,
protesters furious over a renewed lockdown clashed with police last week.
The megacity
reported more than 8,000 daily cases on Sunday, prompting officials to launch a
general screening in the central district of Haizhu, home to about 1.8 million
people.
In a sign that
China’s reopening may yet be waylaid, people have been urged to avoid
“non-imperative” travel around the capital to avoid spreading the virus.
Some of
Beijing’s largest shopping malls were closed 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,
sports halls and gyms have also closed.
The French
International School in Beijing told parents they had been instructed “to
switch to distance learning”, according to an email obtained by AFP.
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