Marriage registrations spike on first day after Wuhan reopens
Wuhan is seeing a spike in marriage registration
appointments on the first day after it reopened on Wednesday. After a 76-day
lockdown, requests to be wedded from local couples-to-be tripled and nearly
crashed an online marriage registration program.
China's global mobile and online payment platform Alipay,
which runs the program, announced on Chinese Twitter-like social media platform
Sina Weibo on Wednesday that because too many users visited the program, about
three times as those before the Spring Festival in late January, the program
had a temporary glitch.
The announcement said the system didn't crash but could be
slow, noting that the users can refresh it several times to log in.
Alipay also reminded users that another program to search
for baby names is also available in case people need it in the future.
Alipay later said on Twitter on Wednesday afternoon that
they "didn't expect the strong demand for marriage services after an
earlier surge in divorce appointments. Our surprised engineers have fixed
things."
Wuhan, capital of Central China's Hubei Province, opened up
on Wednesday after a 76-day lockdown, as local authorities officially lifted
outbound travel restrictions, signaling the normal resumption of life for the
city of 11 million people and a phased victory in combating the novel
coronavirus pneumonia.
Wuhan resumed marriage registration services on April 3.
Residents must hold a health code to make an appointment for registration.
A local woman surnamed Xu, who received her marriage
certificate on Wednesday, told the Global Times that she and her husband
finally married today after the lockdown. Xu noted that she sees the first day
after the lockdown as being very meaningful and would be a good marriage
anniversary day for them.
"Life is back on track. It's a new beginning. And now
I've become a person responsible for three families, as a wife, daughter and
daughter-in-law," Xu said.
The large number of appointments for marriage registration
in Wuhan presents a striking contrast with the situation in some other Chinese
cities in March. According to previous media reports, Chinese cities such as
Xi'an, Northwest China's Shaanxi Province, experienced a divorce peak as a
repercussion of COVID-19 since services were resumed on March 1.
Source:Global Times
Photo: Li Hao/GT
Marriage registrations spike on first day after Wuhan reopens
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