BSS
  11 Nov 2022, 15:52

China eases Covid measures, cutting quarantine and scrapping flight bans

BEIJING, Nov 11, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - China announced the relaxation of some of
its hardline Covid-19 restrictions on Friday, after authorities had vowed to
stick to a zero-tolerance virus approach despite mounting economic damage.

The country is the last major economy welded to a strategy of stamping out
virus flare-ups as they occur, through a combination of snap lockdowns, mass
testing and lengthy quarantines.

Top leaders had pledged to stick "unswervingly" to the policy, which has
forced business closures, roiled international supply chains and weighed
heavily on growth.

But a notice from the country's disease control agency on Friday said the
Politburo Standing Committee -- the apex of power in China -- met Thursday to
rubberstamp limited relaxations.

According to the notice, the quarantine period for inbound travellers will be
cut from 10 days to eight, consisting of five days in a state isolation
centre and three days at home.

Inbound arrivals will still be required to undergo six nucleic acid tests and
will not be allowed to freely set foot outside during those eight days, the
notice says.

It adds that travellers will only be required to show one negative Covid test
within 48 hours of boarding flights to China, a reduction from the current
two tests.

- Relaxing strict policies -

The new rules single out "important business personnel" and "sports groups"
as examples of privileged groups permitted to skip quarantine as long as they
remain in a virus-secure "closed loop" for the duration of their stays.

It added that a so-called "circuit breaker" mechanism on inbound flights
would be abolished, bringing an end to a policy that saw the snap closures of
flight routes if a certain proportion of passengers tested positive for the
virus.

In further signs of easing, the notice did away with the requirement to
identify and isolate "secondary close contacts" -- those who may have come
into contact with people who recently passed near infected people.

A domestic virus risk system has been reduced from three tiers to two, with
areas to be labelled as either "high-risk" and subject to curbs, or "low-
risk" with minimal restrictions.

People travelling from high- to low-risk areas will be required to undergo
seven days of isolation at home, instead of staying in centralised
facilities.

Places will be defined as "low-risk" if they record zero new infections for
five successive days.

 

Workers in environments where exposure to the virus is higher -- such as
cabin crews, airport staff and quarantine hotel personnel -- will undergo
shortened quarantines, the notice said.

Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong soared on Friday following the news, with
the Hang Seng's China Enterprises Index up nearly eight percent in afternoon
trading.

The wider Hang Seng Index was also up 7.5 percent.

Hong Kong's stock exchange has been one of the world's worst performing major
indexes this year, dragged down by the city's only recently relaxed
coronavirus curbs, China's economic woes and the wider global slowdown.

- 'Unswerving' commitment -

China has reopened far more slowly than most other countries, a move that has
kept infections to a minimum.

The country has recorded just over 5,200 Covid deaths, compared with more
than a million in the United States.

But pandemic fatigue has begun to set in as the onerous curbs show little
sign of letting up, while grinding lockdowns of the kind that hit Shanghai
earlier this year have sparked isolated public protests.

And the economic impact has been so severe that analysts now expect China to
miss its stated annual growth target of around 5.5 percent by a wide margin.

Despite the problems, Chinese state media reported this week that top leaders
had vowed not to waver from the zero-Covid policy, echoing a vow last week to
"unswervingly" stick to the strategy.

Yet officials have also taken aim in recent weeks at heavy-handed
enforcement, blasting what they have called "one-size-fits-all" and
excessively bureaucratic local curbs.

Friday's notice added to the chorus, "strictly forbidding" pre-emptive or
overly lengthy lockdowns, unapproved school closures and arbitrary
suspensions of work and traffic.

It vowed to "speed up" Covid vaccinations, especially boosters among the
elderly population -- historically one of the groups most reluctant about
getting their jabs -- and boost reserves of antiviral Covid treatments.

China recorded 10,535 new domestic cases on Friday, the vast majority of
which were asymptomatic, according to the National Health Commission.