Beijing races to test millions following COVID-19 outbreak linked to bar | CBC News

Authorities in China’s capital Beijing raced on Monday to contain a COVID-19 outbreak traced to a 24-hour bar known for cheap liquor and big crowds, with millions facing mandatory testing and thousands under targeted lockdowns.

The outbreak of 228 cases linked to the Heaven Supermarket Bar, which had just reopened as restrictions in Beijing eased last week, highlights how hard it will be for China to make a success of its “zero COVID” policy as much of the rest of the world opts to learn how to live with the virus.

The re-emergence of infections is also raising new concerns about the outlook for the world’s second-largest economy. China is only just shaking off a heavy blow from a long lockdown in Shanghai — its most populous city and commercial nerve center — that also disrupted global supply chains.

“Epidemic prevention and control is at a critical juncture,” a Beijing health official, Liu Xiaofeng, told a news conference on Monday, adding that the outbreak linked to the bar in the city’s biggest district, Chaoyang, was “still developing.”

In a show of how seriously authorities are taking the situation, Vice-Premier Sun Chunlan visited the bar and said it was necessary to strengthen COVID prevention and control of key places, state media reported on Monday.

People infected in the outbreak live or work in 14 of the capital’s 16 districts, authorities have said.

An autonomous robot with a voice message advising people to wear masks and keep social distance patrols through a deserted shopping mall where most shops have been ordered to close as part of COVID-19 controls in Beijing on Monday. (Andy Wong/The Associated Press)

A child holding a soft toy gets a throat swab at a COVID-19 testing site in Beijing on Monday. (Andy Wong/The Associated Press)

Restrictions lifted last week

Drinking and dining in most of Beijing’s establishments only resumed on June 6 after more than a month in which the city of 22 million enforced curbs, including urging people to work from home, and shutting malls and parts of the transport system.

Chaoyang kicked off a three-day mass testing campaign among its roughly 3.5 million residents on Monday. About 10,000 close contacts of the bar’s patrons have been identified, and their residential buildings put under lockdown.

Some planned school re-openings in the district have been postponed.

A resident talks to a worker wearing a protective suit at a residential building under lockdown in Beijing on Monday. (Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters)

Queues snaked around testing sites on Monday for more than 100 metres, according to Reuters witnesses. Large metal barriers have been installed around several residential compounds, with people in hazmat suits spraying disinfectant.

Other nearby businesses under lockdown included the Paradise Massage & Spa parlour. Police tape and security staff blocked the entrance to the parlour on Sunday and authorities said a handful of people would be locked in temporarily for checks.

Last week, as dine-in curbs were lifted, Heaven Supermarket Bar, modelled as a large self-service liquor store with chairs, sofas and tables, reclaimed its popularity among young, noisy crowds starved of socializing and parties during Beijing’s COVID restrictions.

The bar, where patrons check aisles to grab anything from local heavy spirits to Belgian beer, is known among Beijing revelers for its tables littered with empty bottles, and customers falling asleep on sofas after midnight.

People walk past fences outside the Heaven Supermarket bar, where the new COVID-19 outbreak emerged, in the Chaoyang district of Beijing on Monday. (Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters)

Officials have not commented on the exact cause of the outbreak, nor explained why they are not yet reinstating the level of curbs seen last month.

The state-backed Beijing Evening News wrote on Monday that the outbreak arose from loopholes and complacency in epidemic prevention, and said that if it grew, “consequences could be serious, and would be such that nobody would want to see.”

Frustrations in Shanghai

Shanghai endured two months of lockdown with restrictions lifted less than two weeks ago.

There was relief among its residents on Monday after mass testing for most of its 25 million people on the weekend saw only a small rise in daily cases.

A worker wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) padlocks a fence securing a residential area under COVID-19 lockdown in the Huangpu district of Shanghai on Monday. (Hector Retamal/AFP/Getty Images)

But frustrations have continued to simmer about the damage the lockdown caused, especially on residents’ livelihoods.

On Monday, shopkeepers in the city centre held up signs and shouted demands for rent refunds, according to videos widely posted on Chinese social media. The rare protest had dissipated by the time Reuters visited on Monday afternoon, and there was a heavy police presence in the area.

While most Shanghai residents have been released from lockdown, 220,000 people are still restricted to their homes under a rule requiring that no positive cases are found within their residential compounds for more than 10 days.

Another 600,000 are in control zones, where their movements are restricted within their compounds.

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