The travel plans of millions were thrown into disarray Thursday by cancelled trains, flights and Chinese government ‘advice’ to stay at home ahead of the Lunar New Year, a sign of China’s determination to keep virus cases low at all costs.
The capital Beijing is in the grip of a “complex COVID-19 situation”, city health authorities warned Thursday, as the start of the 40-day peak travel period began for the Lunar New Year holiday.
The festival, for many Chinese people the only opportunity to see relatives in the year, sees the world’s biggest annual human movement as hundreds of millions criss-cross the country.
But with cases on the rise—albeit at just scores a day, a fraction of the daily numbers in the US, UK and EU—authorities are hemming in movement with a complex web of localised lockdowns, virus tests, transport restrictions and vaguely worded travel advice.
China has not issued a stay-at-home order, but is instead making travel all but unfeasible and requesting cooperation from its vast population.
That is especially the case in Beijing, where the Communist Party’s annual showpiece gathering of the National People’s Congress is set to be held in March.
“People in the capital city are urged to avoid unnecessary outbound trips and gatherings,” Beijing’s health authority said Thursday in its daily COVID-19 update.
“In response to the grave and complex COVID-19 situation in Beijing, the city authorities have proposed that residents stay put” during the holiday, the report added.
Hundreds of flights in and out of Beijing had been cancelled as of Thursday afternoon, according to flight tracker VariFlight.
Chinese people across the country are also being nudged into staying put—with Yiwu city government in the east offering vouchers, phone data and free winter camps for children to entice residents to remain.
Authorities have asked entertainment streaming services to offer free movies, TV and sports services during the holiday to help people pass the time at home, while the three largest mobile operators—China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicom—will give 20GB free data to users based in Beijing during the festival.
A commentary released on Xinhua said the “non-mandatory” appeal for people to stay where they were was to avoid a major outbreak which could spark “massive lockdowns” and “weakened confidence”.
That risks unpicking the economic rebound which saw GDP growth last year recorded at two percent, which made China the only major economy to post positive figures in a year lost the virus.
Mass testing regimes have been imposed across a number of Beijing neighbourhoods where small clusters of the virus have been detected, as fears abound of new strains ripping through a vast population.
China says it has also begun using anal swabs to test those it considers at high risk of contracting COVID-19, prompting social media users and travellers to squirm over the invasive procedure.
Officials took anal swabs from residents of neighbourhoods with confirmed COVID-19 cases in Beijing last week, broadcaster CCTV said on Wednesday, while those in designated quarantine facilities have also undergone the test.
The virus first emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019.
The country’s National Health Commission says 4,636 people have died in the country as a result of the virus.
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