Confused policy response to record Covid outbreak sparks protests in Guangzhou


Guangzhou is on a knife edge, with a burst of public protests as regional Chinese Communist party leaders struggle with conflicting guidance from Beijing on how to handle a record coronavirus outbreak in the city of 18mn.

Officials in the capital of southern China’s Guangdong province have been caught between relaxing some Covid-19 measures while still trying to suppress the spread of the virus.

“Officials were still discussing the need to lock down the city last week, as the number of infected people was rising so rapidly that it was causing the government to panic,” said an adviser at the Guangdong Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

The dilemma facing provincial and city leaders is being closely watched as a critical test of President Xi Jinping’s hallmark zero-Covid policy, after Beijing signalled plans to relax some quarantine and contact-tracing requirements on Friday.

There is mounting uncertainty over how officials will respond to a surge in Omicron outbreaks across the world’s most populous country, including in Beijing and the south-western megacity of Chongqing. There are also questions about the financial sustainability of zero-Covid as local governments run out of funds to pay for daily mass PCR testing.

“Guangzhou’s current control approach is like an experiment, concentrating only on areas where the number of infections continues to rise and maintaining normal order in other areas,” the Guangdong CDC adviser added.

Guangzhou has reported more than 33,000 cases since October. Cases hit a record 8,761 on Wednesday, more than double the daily rate at the peak of Shanghai’s crippling two-month lockdown this year.

While Guangzhou has averted a citywide lockdown, at least 9mn residents across five of the city’s 11 main districts are under heavy-handed restrictions of movement and required to take daily tests.

The Guangzhou government had announced on Friday that it would immediately lift quarantine for close contacts of close contacts, as they attempted to fall in line with some of Beijing’s new rules.

However, conditions in Guangzhou have sparked a flurry of isolated protests, mostly focused in so-called urban villages — groups of tenements built on former farmland and housing mostly poorer workers and families.

A 35-year-old migrant worker, surnamed Wang, who lives in the urban village of Shangchong in Haizhu district, told the Financial Times that a protest broke out in the district after frontline anti-pandemic workers stopped a pregnant woman leaving a sealed-off compound.

Wang, who has been under lockdown for the past three weeks, said residents were fuming over being sealed inside their small neighbourhoods and complained about food shortages.

 “[The officials] charged us Rmb25 ($3.50) for a packet of instant noodles,” he said.

On Monday, officials sparked demonstrations after they failed to provide fresh groceries and medical services for residents and migrant workers who were fed up with weeks of lockdowns in the Haizhu subdistrict of Qiaonan, a small textile manufacturing hub, according to residents.

A film-maker surnamed Zhong, who is based…



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