Wuhan lockdown ends
By Zhao
Yusha, Chen Qingqing and Cao Siqi
Wuhan,
capital of Central China’s Hubei Province, restarts on Wednesday, April 8,
after a 76-day lockdown as local authorities officially lift 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 (COVID-19).
Many
ordinary Wuhan residents such as delivery men, office employees, doctors and
nurses as well as migrant workers trapped in the city since the beginning of
the Spring Festival holidays in late January have been eagerly waiting for this
day. When the hardest-hit city emerges gradually from its most difficult period
and fully embraces the springtime, the whole country is also moving forward
steadily and cautiously in preventing sporadic infection cases, fending off the
risks of a possible second wave.
The
hustle and bustle of crowds now can be seen on Wuhan’s streets. Although
wearing masks, people can be seen full of energy; laughter and constant
intimate arguments being heard among groups of naturally chirpy and
rambunctious Wuhan people.
Thirty-year-old
Hou, a local Wuhan resident, said she was surprised to see so many people on
the street on Tuesday, the day before the final lifting of Wuhan’s travel
ban.
“I haven’t
left home for two months. Wuhan’s ‘restart’ is a good sign; it is hope, and a
victory, for me, for all Wuhan residents,” Hou told the Global Times on
Tuesday.
Regaining vitality
The city
entered a countdown to the end of the travel ban, a major step the country has
taken in combating the COVID-19 epidemic since January 23, which helped slow the
virus’ transmission to other regions in China and delayed the spread to other
countries, as a recent medical journal estimated, by nearly 80 percent.
Wang Qi,
an employee from the Wuhan section of China Railway High-Speed (CRH), said that
his colleagues and he have been preparing weeks in advance for the lifting of
the two-month travel ban.
“We have
been disinfecting; maintaining and examining the trains several times a day, to
make sure everything goes smoothly on Wednesday when the first train departs
Wuhan in two months,” said Wang.
He said
only about 30 percent of trains in CRH’s Wuhan section will depart Wuhan on
Wednesday, “because risks of the pandemic still exist and it hasn’t completely
receded.”
Wang
said they prioritized local laborers who are in urgent need of beginning to
work outside the city, as passengers leave Wuhan on Wednesday. “Many travelers
also prefer private vehicles as they fear potential transmission in the train’s
sealed and concentrated spaces.”
Following
thorough maintenance checks and reviews, in total 230 bullet trains are being
made ready for departure, according to local media reports. Local authorities
also announced on Tuesday that starting from 00:00 on April 8, Wuhan will lift
75 checkpoints designated to control outbound flows and resume normal function
of 15 major traffic security checkpoints, while random inspection work would be
carried out in line with epidemic prevention and control work.
About
55,000 people are estimated to leave Wuhan by train on Wednesday, most of whom
are heading to the Pearl River Delta, home to many of China’s warehouses. The
first train will go to Nanning, South China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region
at 7:06 am, according to the local railway authority.
For some
people, the easing ban means the replenishment of daily life pleasures; but for
others, it means the resumption of their livelihoods.
Wang Lei
(pseudonym), a delivery man, said he was told to go back to work one week ago. “When
I heard the government finally decided to lift the ban, the first thought in my
mind was that I can have my life back.”
Wang
stayed at home earning nothing for the past two months. Pointing to the crowds
walking in front of luxury shops, he said, “The more people here, the merrier.
If Wuhan remains locked down for another two weeks, my pockets will dry up.”
Cautiously moving forward
Hong
Jie, a community worker in Wuhan’s Zhongshan district, told the Global Times on
Tuesday that the lifting of the traffic ban will not affect the community’s
strict health management measures.
“The
strict measures regarding community management will be carried on,” said Hong.
The
community workers are also helping register recovered patients and others who
finished their quarantine periods. “We need to make their health codes turn
green once we are sure that they are ‘clean’. So they can move around freely.”
She said
certain shops and restaurants need to pass hygiene examinations and receive
careful disinfection guidance from authorities before they can be opened to the
public.
Local
officials in Wuhan have warned earlier that they should prevent relapses of
infection cases due to lifting the city lockdown, especially after the country
has made visible progress in containing the virus.
Mi Feng,
spokesperson of the National Health Commission, said on Tuesday that the
country has reported no new confirmed cases, no new suspected cases and no new
deaths on Monday, and domestic critically ill cases have dropped below 200 for the
first time since the outbreak.
“However,
there have been sporadic infection cases in the country for several days. While
the epidemic situation is worsening in Europe and the US, imported cases
surpassed domestic ones [in China], bringing pressure for treatment, prevention
and control work, testings as well as quarantine measures,” he said.
China
still faces domestic cases and imported infections, adding up the challenges,
and the prevention and control task is still arduous, Mi noted.
Though Wuhan’s
city lockdown will be lifted on Wednesday, there won’t be any changes in
community-based control work for residential areas, and now it potentially may
be the most dangerous period as the flow of people would largely increase, the
community inspection needs to be further enhanced, Ye Qing, deputy director of
the Statistics Bureau of Central China’s Hubei Province, told the Global Times
on Tuesday.
Considering
the COVID-19 pandemic situation overseas and resumption of outbound traffic,
many uncertainties have emerged, making prevention and control work in Wuhan
more complicated and long-term community-based control mechanisms necessary, Hu
Shuguang, deputy commander of Wuhan’s epidemic prevention and control, told a
press conference on Tuesday.
In
addition to daily inspections such as temperature screening and registration,
local authorities would thoroughly investigate asymptomatic cases, those
testing positive again after recovery and visitors coming to Wuhan for the
first time, he said.
As of
Monday, Wuhan had in total 6,988 virus-free residential compounds, accounting
for 98.4 percent of the total. However, the number of virus-free compounds
dropped by 45 compared to the number three days ago, and still 70 residential
compounds suspended or canceled their viral free status due to asymptomatic
patients, according to the local prevention and control commanding unit in
Wuhan.
Some
other places have also been strengthening procedures regarding incoming
arrivals from Wuhan and Hubei. East China’s Zhejiang said on Tuesday that it
will conduct nucleic acid and serum tests on inbound travelers from Wuhan in
the next 14 days to bolster screening of asymptomatic patients. People who test
positive will be classified as asymptomatic carriers or confirmed cases.
Cheng
Cai, a local doctor from Wuhan Tongji hospital who has been fighting the
epidemic on the frontline for more than two months, said there are still many
unanswered questions such as transmission routes and the virus itself. “We can’t
relax prevention work and we need to still prevent a possible rebound,” he told
the Global Times on Tuesday.
“Asymptomatic
cases have occurred since the beginning of the outbreak. Before we figure out
such questions, enhancing prevention and control is the only effective measure,”
he said.
Entering
and exiting shopping malls or other public places in Wuhan now requires
constant green code checking, an indication that the holder is clear of viral
infection and never has had any close contacts with suspected or confirmed
cases. But for Hou, the local resident, it is nothing compared with the joy
that she can finally breathe fresh air.
“I will
always cherish the opportunity to walk on the street freely,” she said.
Source:Global
Times
Wuhan starts to welcome vehicles
from other cities.
Photo: Li Hao/Global Times
Wuhan lockdown ends
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