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Reuters
Reuters
Health
By Liz Lee and Bernard Orr

China's Guangzhou brings back mass testing to fight city's worst COVID outbreak

A trader moves goods through the Guotai Business City trading centre in Guangzhou's Sanyuanli district, following the ease of restrictions on trade buildings in the city, after the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), Guangdong province, China June 17, 2020. REUTERS/David Kirton/Files

Millions of residents of China's southern manufacturing hub of Guangzhou were told on Wednesday to get tested for COVID-19, as infections topped two thousand for two days running in the city's worst outbreak so far.

As local cases across China reached their highest level since April 30, authorities announced on social media that five districts representing more than half Guangzhou's population of almost 19 million would need to undergo mass testing.

Pandemic prevention workers don protective suits in a residential compound that was placed under lockdown as outbreaks of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continue in Beijing, China November 9, 2022. REUTERS/Thomas Peter

The latest round of mass testing in Guangzhou comes as China battles a rebound in infections in several economically vital cities, including the capital Beijing, as well as Zhengzhou and Chongqing, which have dampened hopes that the world's second-largest economy could ease curbs and restrictions soon.

Authorities are determined to get on top of the outbreaks and make good on President Xi Jinping's zero-COVID policy, without having to impose mass lockdowns of the sort that shut Shanghai earlier this year.

The districts in Guangzhou subject to mass testing this week include Haizhu, which has seen the bulk of the city's cases. A district-wide lockdown from Saturday to Monday has been extended to Friday as cases rise.

"My residential compound in Tianhe (district) has been locked up since yesterday," said Guangzhou resident Jason Li.

"I was suddenly notified by my compound. Residents were instructed not to leave our building."

Li said he hadn't been told for how long his compound would be locked up.

"Thank god I've stocked up on groceries recently," he said.

Lily Li, a Guangzhou resident, said the outbreak in the city had worsened in the past two days, having spread to Tianhe, just north of Haizhu.

"Honestly, it's already a huge surprise that Tianhe hadn't been affected sooner," she said.

Guangzhou reported 2,637 new locally transmitted COVID cases for Nov. 8, up from 2,377 a day earlier amid the city's most serious outbreak to date and accounting for nearly a third of the 8,176 new local infections reported in China on the day.

ECONOMIC TOLL

In the latest sign of how anti-virus measures are crushing consumer demand, China's factory gate prices for October dropped for the first time since December 2020 and consumer inflation moderated, in part due to strict COVID curbs.

In central China, Apple supplier Foxconn said it would continue to maintain closed-loop operations - a system where staff live on-site isolated from the wider world - at its iPhone plant even as the economic zone that housed the factory lifted a seven-day lockdown.

Foxconn has declined to disclose the number of infections or comment on the conditions of those infected. The issues at the plant have hit iPhone production, prompting Apple on Monday to say that it expects lower shipments of premium iPhone 14 models.

While COVID cases in China are small by global standards, the policy response has been relentless and mass testing for large populations has been the norm since 2020.

Mass testing is generally free, but some local governments are resuming charges for tests as their finances come under strain amid a slowing economy.

Even Chengdu, the sprawling capital of southwestern Sichuan province, will end free COVID tests after Nov. 30.

Reflecting the financial stress that COVID testing has inflicted on smaller cities, a COVID testing company in Xuchang, a city in Henan province, on Tuesday threatened to stop all testing-related work from Friday due to late payments from authorities. On Wednesday, the firm said the payment issue had been resolved and testing would go ahead.

(Reporting by Liz Lee, Bernard Orr, Martin Quin Pollard and Beijing newsroom; Additional reporting by Josh Ye in Hong Kong; Editing by Stephen Coates, Tom Hogue & Simon Cameron-Moore)

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