China eases COVID-19 measures after protests

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China is softening its tone on the severity of the COVID-19 and has began easing some coronavirus restrictions even as its daily case toll hovers near record highs, after anger over the world’s toughest curbs fuelled protests across the country.

Several cities in the world’s second-largest economy, while still reporting new infections, are lifting district lockdowns and allowing businesses to reopen.

Health authorities announcing the relaxation of measures did not mention the protests, which ranged from candle-lit vigils in Beijing to clashes with the police on the streets of Guangzhou on Tuesday and at an iPhone factory in Zhengzhou last week.

The demonstrations marked the biggest show of civil disobedience in mainland China since President Xi Jinping took power a decade ago as the economy is set to enter a new era of much slower growth than seen in decades.

Vice Premier, Sun Chunlan, who oversees COVID efforts, said the ability of the virus to cause disease was weakening, state media reported.

“The country is facing a new situation and new tasks in epidemic prevention and control as the pathogenicity of the Omicron virus weakens, more people are vaccinated and experience in containing the virus is accumulated,” Sun said in comments reported in state media.

Sun also urged further “optimisation” of testing, treatment, and quarantine policies.

The mention of weakening pathogenicity contrasts with earlier messages from authorities about the deadliness of the virus.

Less than 24 hours after violent protests in Guangzhou, authorities in at least seven districts of the sprawling manufacturing hub north of Hong Kong, said they were lifting temporary lockdowns.

One district said it would allow in-person classes in schools to resume and would reopen restaurants and other businesses including cinemas.
Some changes are being implemented with little fanfare.

A community of thousands in east Beijing is allowing infected people with mild symptoms to isolate at home, according to new rules issued by the neighbourhood committee.

Neighbours on the same floor and three stories above and below the home of a positive case are to also quarantine at home, a committee member said.

That is a far cry from quarantine protocols earlier in the year when entire communities were locked down, sometimes for weeks, after even just one positive case was found.

Another community nearby has said it will hold an online poll this week on the possibility of positive cases isolating at home, residents said.

“I certainly welcome the decision by our residential community to run this vote regardless of the outcome,” said resident Tom Simpson, managing director for China at the China-Britain Business Council.

He said his main concern was being forced to go into a quarantine facility, where “conditions can be grim, to say the least.”

NAN