Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Caixin Global
Caixin Global
Lifestyle
Gao Yu

Reporter’s Notebook: Spending New Year’s Eve in the Eye of the Virus Storm

Caixin reporters, under full protective gears, write down each other’s name on the back to help identify. Photo: Caixin

(Wuhan) – Yesterday was New Year’s Eve in China.

Social media posts circulated online describing Wuhan, the city locked down because of the virus, as ‘hell on earth’ – saying things are out of control, that medical workers don’t have enough food supplies, and that desperate patients had even attacked doctors by ripping open their protective gowns.

None of these things were true.

Overall, the city still operates in an orderly fashion. But shortages of medical devices and the fact that most local medical staff are incredibly overloaded are indeed severe problems. And most worryingly of all is the continuous spread of the virus.

Two Caixin reporters and I were conducting interviews in hospitals most of the day. In the evening, in the spirit of the New Year, we drove for quite a while in Wuchang, in many ways the urban heart of the city, and found one restaurant before it closed its door. There we had our new year dinner, and toasted everyone, wishing them a good Year of Rat.

Our new year eve dinner at a local restaurant. Photo: Caixin
We keep out clothes outside hotel room to prevent infection. Photo: Caixin

At midnight, we were at the airport. Additional resources and medical staff had started to land, coming from around the country. All hopeful they could join the fight to combat the virus and help Wuhan emerge faster out of the disaster.

Back in our hotel, we found protective gear waiting for us kindly donated by people we don’t even know, sent from around the country.

The three of us are the only customers of this hotel. They keep operating just for us, and put a small gift of fruit in our room - it’s the new year after all.

Dozens of airplanes landed in Wuhan airport at mid-night, carrying medical workers and devices. Photo: Caixin
Dozens of airplanes landed in Wuhan airport at mid-night, carrying medical workers and devices. Photo: Caixin

Gao Yu is the deputy managing editor of Caixin Media

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.