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Pressure mounts in Shanghai, China, due to confinement by covid-19

2022-04-12T09:16:40.329Z


Shanghai, with 25 million inhabitants, is at the center of China's efforts to eradicate the largest outbreak of covid-19 in the country.


Shanghai: protests over the world's largest covid-19 lockdown 4:08

Shanghai (CNN) --

The distant echo of a megaphone resounds most mornings from the narrow alley where I live in Shanghai, summoning me and my neighbors to our homes for our mandatory COVID-19 test.

Mask on, cell phone in hand, I'm out before the volunteers in protective suits have time to call.

If you miss the call, they will keep calling until someone answers.

Nobody is exempt.

This huge city of 25 million people is at the center of China's efforts to eradicate the largest Covid outbreak in the country's history.

No one is allowed to leave their residential compounds, not even to buy food, which means that we are dependent on the government or private delivery drivers who are affected by the huge demand.

That is putting a lot of pressure on the system, and for many people, the restrictions are more distressing than the threat of the virus.

  • ANALYSIS |

    The chaotic confinement in Shanghai by covid-19 leaves other cities in China in suspense

CNN's David Culver gets a regular COVID test during the lockdown in Shanghai, China.

Outside my apartment, community workers in special suits lead me and my neighbors in a physical distance procession past our front door, the only time I am allowed to leave my apartment.

But they never get us out the door;

it has been sealed off with bike locks and chains for more than three weeks.

As we walk over to a blue-tented table where the doctors are waiting to administer the test, I feel a surge of emotions: relief to be able to get out in the fresh air and spring sunshine, and anxiety: what if I take the test and go outside? positive?

I worry that I will be sent to the spartan Shanghai quarantine system for days or weeks.

Images of the facility suggest it could face overcrowded and unsanitary conditions with overflowing garbage cans, no running water, and dirty communal toilets.

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But I am more worried about what will happen to Chairman, my rescue dog.

What happens to your pet if you test positive remains a troubling gray area with no clear solution.

Horror stories are circulating online about pets being left behind and a person in a hazmat suit recently killed a pet with a shovel.

If I am taken into quarantine, I hope that one of the local vets or community groups can take care of my dog.

I've packed a small bag of Chairman's essentials that's by the door in case someone can carry it if I'm taken.

David Culver worries what will happen to his dog Chairman if he tests positive and has to quarantine.

But that may be unlikely.

Aside from essential workers, the entire city is like me, in lockdown and isolation.

Lockdowns make people fight for extra food

In late March, before the city was ordered to stay home, panic shoppers emptied grocery store shelves.

Now, despair has set in.

Videos show people yelling at community workers, begging for food, saying they are starving.

Others show crowds at a quarantined food distribution site fighting over a small delivery of vegetables.

This is how people shout from isolation in Shanghai 1:07

In my community, the government delivers food once every few days.

Deliveries range from a box of vegetables and eggs, to a vacuum-sealed pork joint, or some Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM).

What they deliver, by itself, is not enough to feed one person, let alone an entire family, beyond a day or so.

I ration my food and make the most of what comes into the box and any additional food my community has been able to get.

Lately, most of my meals have been a combination of eggs and carrots;

you have to be creative.

Many communities have set up group chats with their neighbors on the Chinese social media app WeChat.

From time to time there are offers for group food purchases, but the options are limited.

Stores are closed, delivery drivers blocked, supply chains disrupted.

One of my neighbors writes in the chat group, "What should I do if I don't have food?"

The community liaison replies, "No group buying; vegetables are in short supply now."

I spend much of my days in lockdown trying to place multiple grocery orders, hoping one will arrive.

Last week, I was woken up by a call just after midnight: one of my orders had shown up.

I urgently tried to contact our Community Liaisons to help get it back, but after a long day at work they were asleep.

So, I had to leave the purchases in a box on the street outside the complex until 6 am, hoping that nothing would be stolen or damaged by the time I could get them.

Fortunately, it was still there in the morning.

  • A video shows a health worker in Shanghai beating a dog to death after its owner tested positive for covid-19

CNN's David Culver tries to order extra food most days, and residents of his complex trade food to cover the shortage.

Some of us have resorted to creating contactless "drop off points," where we trade food to vary our diets.

For example, after walking home from a community covid test, one of my neighbors texted me: she had left a block of cheese in the shaded spot on her bike.

When I headed to my covid test later, I took the cheesecake from her and replaced it with two oranges.

He then picked the fruit when she was allowed out for her next covid test.

The authorities seem to be listening to the complaints.

Over the weekend, Shanghai Vice Mayor Zong Ming choked up at a press conference and apologized to city residents for falling short of expectations.

And on Monday, authorities promised to start easing lockdowns in some areas.

Anger and an uncertain future due to the new confinement

From Wuhan in 2020 onwards, I have covered every aspect of this coronavirus outbreak in China.

The initial mishandling and alleged cover-up of the initial spread seemed to have been forgotten by the public as the central government went ahead with its "covid zero" policy.

For two years, China has largely succeeded in keeping the virus out, closing borders and introducing a seemingly sophisticated contact-tracing system that uses smartphone technology to track us and our potential exposure to the virus.

Officials have perfected mass testing with capabilities to rapidly process cities with populations in the tens of millions.

And they have mostly relied on quick, targeted lockdowns — shutting down a neighborhood, an office, or even a mall with a confirmed case or close contact inside, trying to avoid shutting down entire cities to minimize social and economic damage.

In recent months, entire cities have gone into lockdown, including Xi'an, Tianjin and Shenzhen, but nothing on the scale of Shanghai, where the adrenaline rush and community spirit to contain the virus have been replaced by fatigue, frustration and despair.

From the confines of my 55-square-meter apartment, I wonder, is this really happening?

In Shanghai, of all places?

Shanghai, a modern city of skyscrapers and restaurants, once rivaled cosmopolitan centers like Paris and New York.

Now, millions of residents are struggling to meet their basic needs from the confines of their homes.

That's not to say that life in Shanghai won't resume as before, but the actions, or inaction, of the past few weeks, coupled with the constant uncertainty over the past two years about the harsh restrictions that could suddenly emerge in the name of covid prevention, leaves many feeling increasingly disconnected from this city and each other.

On Monday, the US State Department ordered non-essential consular staff and their families to leave the city, citing the rise in Covid-19 cases and the impact of restrictions put in place to contain it.

Most of the expats I know have already left or are determined to do so.

The reason?

"This is not sustainable" is a common refrain.

Mentally.

emotionally.

Physically.

It is not.

Covid-19Shanghai

Source: cnnespanol

All news articles on 2022-04-12

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