Chinese President Xi Jinping called for more effort and unity as the country enters a “new phase” in its approach to combating the pandemic, in his first comments to the public on Covid-19 since his government changed course three weeks ago and relaxed its rigorous policy of lockdowns and mass testing.
China’s abrupt switch earlier this month from the “zero-Covid” policy that it had maintained for nearly three years has led to infections sweeping across the country unchecked. It has also caused a further drop in economic activity and international concern, with Britain and France becoming the latest countries to impose curbs on travellers from China.
The switch by China followed unprecedented protests over the policy championed by Xi, marking the strongest show of public defiance in his decade-old presidency and coinciding with grim growth figures for the country’s $17tn economy.
In a televised speech to mark the New Year, Xi said China had overcome unprecedented difficulties and challenges in the battle against Covid, and that its policies were “optimised” when the situation and time so required. “Since the outbreak of the epidemic ... the majority of cadres and masses, especially medical personnel, grassroots workers braved hardships and courageously persevered,” Xi said. “At present, the epidemic prevention and control is entering a new phase, it is still a time of struggle, everyone is persevering and working hard, and the dawn is ahead. Let’s work harder, persistence means victory, and unity means victory.”
New Year’s Eve prompted reflection online and by residents of Wuhan, the epicentre of the Covid outbreak nearly three years ago, about the zero-Covid policy and the impact of its reversal.
People in the central city of Wuhan expressed hope that normal life would return in 2023 despite a surge in cases since pandemic curbs were lifted.
Wuhan resident Chen Mei, 45, said she hoped her teenage daughter would see no further disruptions to her schooling. “When she can’t go to the school and can only have classes online it’s definitely not an effective way of learning,” she said. Across the country, many people voiced similar hopes on social media, while others were critical. Zhang Wenhong, director of the National Centre for Infectious Diseases, told the People’s Daily in an interview published yesterday that Shanghai had reached a peak of infections on Dec 22, saying there were currently about 10mn cases. He said those numbers indicated that some 50,000 people in the city of 25mn would need to be hospitalised in the next few weeks. At the central hospital of Wuhan, where former Covid whistleblower Li Wenliang worked and later died of the virus in early 2020, patient numbers were down on Saturday compared with the rush of the past few weeks, a worker outside the hospital’s fever clinic told Reuters.
“This wave is almost over,” said the worker, who was wearing a hazmat suit. A pharmacist whose store is next to the hospital said most people in the city had now been infected and recovered. “It is mainly old people who are getting sick with it now,” he said.
In the first indication of the toll on China’s giant manufacturing sector from the change in Covid policy, data yesterday showed factory activity shrank for the third straight month in December and at the sharpest pace in nearly three years.
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