COVID-19

China’s Chengdu to lift COVID-19 lockdown of whole city

The Chinese megacity of Chengdu will resume normal life and social order from Monday, after a city-wide lockdown was imposed on September 1 to contain a COVID-19 outbreak, according to a statement from the local government.

Local residents still need to have at least one COVID-19 test each week and negative results within 72 hours are needed for entering public venues and taking public transportation, according to the statement.

Read the latest updates in our dedicated coronavirus section.

The capital of Sichuan province, Chengdu is the biggest city to have shut since Shanghai’s bruising two-month lockdown earlier this year. The brief lockdown in Chengdu followed that of Shenzhen and Zhengzhou, which also deployed seven-day citywide restrictions.

Strict, quick action to stamp out COVID-19 is key to China’s zero-tolerance approach to the virus, which President Xi Jinping has touted as a success.

The city, with 21 million people, said that schools will resume and public venues such as restaurants and museums can reopen.

Chengdu locked down as the Communist Party prepared for the twice-a-decade leadership summit, slated to take place in October, when Xi is expected to break precedent by securing a third term in office. His opening address at the event will be scrutinized for signals on whether China will shift from trying to eliminate the virus to living with it like the rest of the world.

COVID-19 measures added to the hardships that residents in Chengdu and the wider Sichuan province experienced this summer.

The province saw record-breaking heat waves that led to droughts and forest fires, with the government introducing rolling power cuts to conserve electricity.

A magnitude 6.8 earthquake struck western Sichuan on Monday, with tremors being felt in Chengdu. Some residents complained on social media that when they went to evacuate, the fire exits in their buildings had been sealed due to the lockdown.

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Human development set back five years by COVID-19, other crises: UN

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