SHANGHAI, April 24 (Reuters) – Authorities in Shanghai, battling the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus, have erected fences outside apartment buildings, sparking fresh public anger over a lockdown that has forced many of the city’s 25 million residents indoors.
Pictures of workers in white suits blocking the entrances to apartment blocks and blocking entire streets with a green fence about two meters long have spread on social media, prompting questions and complaints from residents.
“This is a disrespect for the rights of people indoors, using metal barriers to enclose them like pets,” said one user on social media platform Weibo.
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One of the videos showed residents shouting from balconies at workers trying to erect a fence before they retreated and took it. Other videos showed people trying to remove fences.
“Isn’t this a fire hazard?” Another Weibo user asked.
Many fences have been erected around compounds designated as “closed areas” – buildings where at least one person has tested positive for COVID-19, meaning residents are prevented from leaving their front doors.
It was not clear what prompted the authorities to resort to fencing. A notice dated Saturday from a local authority posted online said it was imposing a “strict quarantine” in some areas.
Reuters was unable to verify the authenticity of the notice or all of the photos, but saw a green fence on a street in central Shanghai on Sunday.
This week, Reuters also saw police in hazmat suits patrolling the streets of Shanghai, setting up roadblocks and telling pedestrians to go home.
The Shanghai government did not respond to a request for comment.
China’s most populous city and most important economic hub is fighting the country’s largest outbreak of COVID-19 with a policy of pushing all positive cases into quarantine centers.
The lockdown, which has lasted for many residents for more than three weeks, has fueled frustration over access to food and medical care, lost wages, family separation and quarantine conditions.
It has also crippled the world’s second-largest economy, with factory production disrupted by congested supply chains and the hardships of a closed population returning to work. Read more
Shanghai is conducting daily citywide COVID-19 tests and accelerating the transfer of positive cases to central facilities to eliminate transmission of the virus outside quarantine areas.
Last week, authorities also moved entire communities, including uninfected people, saying they needed to disinfect their homes, according to residents and social media posts.
Many residents have taken to the internet to vent about the lockdown and express dissent, using euphemisms and other means to fight government censorship who often remove content critical of the authorities.
Chat app data showed that “Do you hear people sing?” videos were reposted. , a protest anthem from “Les Miserables,” as the French musical’s title received more than 90 million mentions on WeChat on Saturday.
Shanghai reported 39 COVID-19 deaths on April 23, compared to 12 the day before and by far the largest during the current outbreak.
No deaths were reported in the first few weeks, raising doubts among residents about these figures. It has since reported 87 deaths, all in the past seven days.
The city recorded 19,657 new locally transmitted asymptomatic cases, compared to 20,634 the day before, and 1,401 asymptomatic, compared to 2,736.
The total number of cases outside quarantine areas was 280 from 218 the day before. Other cities that were under lockdown began easing restrictions once cases reached zero.
China has largely succeeded in keeping COVID-19 at bay after the initial outbreak in Wuhan in late 2019, with a policy of “dynamic zero” aimed at stamping out chains of infection.
This approach has been challenged by the spread of the highly contagious but less lethal variant of Omicron, which has prompted cities to impose varying levels of movement restrictions.
Nationally, China reported 20,285 new cases of coronavirus today, Saturday, compared to 21,423 cases the previous day, with 1,580 symptomatic cases, compared to 2,988 cases.
Beijing recorded 22 new cases of COVID-19 – all transmitted locally – compared to six the day before, prompting a number of gyms and after-school activity providers to suspend in-person lessons.
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Additional reporting by Brenda Goh, Jacqueline Wong, Martin Pollard, Norihiko Shiroso and David Stanway, Shanghai and Beijing newsrooms; Editing by Tony Munro and Christopher Cushing
Our criteria: Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.