Voicing joy and excitement from behind face masks, tens of thousands of people fled Wuhan yesterday after a 76-day travel ban was lifted on the Chinese city where the coronavirus first emerged.
Previously quiet train and bus stations bustled as an exodus began from the city of 11mn, with some passengers wearing hazmat suits. Hao Mei, a single parent from the nearby city of Enshi, said her two children had been home alone since she got stuck in Wuhan, where she works in a school kitchen.
“You have no idea! I was already up around 4am. I felt so good. My kids are so excited. Mum is finally coming home,” the 39-year-old told AFP as she waited to board a train. “At the start of the lockdown, I cried every night. I was really miserable, because my little girl is still young, she’s only 10.”
Up to 55,000 people were expected to leave Wuhan yesterday just by train, according to government estimates.
Steady streams of cars hit the road yesterday morning, with barricades on the city’s outskirts dismantled after the ban on outbound travel was lifted at midnight. Ferries, trams and taxis resumed operations and the airport also opened again for domestic flights, with queueing passengers in protective wear wheeling cases and staff spraying disinfectant on the floor.
State news agency Xinhua said there would be around 200 flights on Wednesday. A group of medics leaving Wuhan tearfully hugged colleagues from the city goodbye as they prepared to board flights home.
Wuhan led the world with an unprecedented quarantine lockdown on January 23 in a bid to stop the spread of the then-mysterious respiratory virus. Chinese disease control officials said in January that the virus likely leapt from wildlife to humans at a Wuhan market that sold wild animals for food.
The rest of surrounding Hubei province quickly followed Wuhan, cutting tens of millions of people off from the world. As the virus spread rapidly around the globe, around half of humanity has been forced into some form of lockdown. But while the pandemic continues to worsen in many other parts of the world, with the global death toll surpassing 80,000, quarantine measures have appeared to pay off in China.
The officially reported number of new deaths has plummeted in recent weeks. China’s ruling Communist Party – accused of a slow-footed response and an initial attempt to cover up the outbreak – has portrayed its subsequent containment efforts as a huge success.
“Wuhan deserves to be called the city of heroes,” blared an announcement on one of the city’s train station PA systems yesterday. “Wuhan has lost a lot in this epidemic, and Wuhan people have paid a big price,” a 21-year-old man surnamed Yao, who was heading back to his restaurant job in Shanghai, told AFP. “Now that the lockdown has been lifted, I think we’re all pretty happy.”
Restrictions began to be eased for residents of Hubei, which has suffered the majority of China’s officially reported 3,300 deaths, about two weeks ago.
Authorities, however, waited until yesterday to allow normal traffic out of provincial capital Wuhan amid lingering fears elsewhere in China that people from the city pose a risk. Those fears were clearly evident throughout Wuhan despite the buzz of excitement.
At the city’s Hankou station, a robot whizzed through crowds of passengers, spraying their feet with disinfectant and playing a recorded message reminding them to wear face masks.
Passengers had to submit to temperature checks and show a green “health code” on their phone, meaning they are considered healthy and can travel.
Part of the “health code” approval is based on their neighbourhood being virus-free.
A postgraduate student surnamed Xu at the station said she had been made to do a nucleic acid test and receive written approval before she could even leave her residential compound. Many travellers from Wuhan will also face two-week quarantines at their destination. Eastern Zhejiang province said all arrivals from Wuhan in the next two weeks must take a virus test. Various restrictions on movement within the sprawling metropolis will also remain in place to guard against a second wave of infections.
The state-run People’s Daily newspaper warned that opening up “does not mean releasing control”. Schools in Wuhan will remain closed and citizens are being discouraged from leaving the city, or even their own neighbourhoods. AFP saw extra reinforcements had been placed around the perimeter of one neighbourhood in the city to make sure residents could not sneak out except through monitored entrances.
Wuhan public security bureau official Yan Qiangsheng told reporters that “lifting the lockdown doesn’t mean stopping the anti-virus measures we have in place.”
Staff members cleaning a bullet train in preparation for resuming operations after authorities lifted a more than two-month ban on outbound travel, in Wuhan in China’s central Hubei province.