ChinasCovid-19 resurgence spurs new curbs; iPhone maker imposes new restrictions

 ChinasCovid-19 resurgence spurs new curbs; iPhone maker imposes new restrictions

SHANGHAI An escalating Covid-19 resurgence has spurred health officials and companies in China, including key iPhone manufacturer Foxconn, to ramp up measures to contain outbreaks, disrupting production and throwing business events into confusion.

Chinas daily Covid-19 cases jumped to the highest number in more than six months, as outbreaks flared across the nation, and health officials declared they would stick to strict virus controls.

China reported on Monday 5,496 new locally transmitted Covid-19 cases for Sunday, the highest since May 2, when the countrys commercial capital of Shanghai was put under a crushing lockdown amid its worst outbreak.

Beijing has shut schools in its most populous district, ordering students to study from home as an outbreak in the capital persists. Multiple schools in the Chaoyang district, home to corporate headquarters and embassies, halted in-person schooling from Monday, according to social media posts, although there has been no official government statement. Beijing reported 55 new infections for Sunday.

Hopes that China would start to wind back its zero-tolerance approach to the virus fanned by unverified social media posts last week were damped by comments from health officials over the weekend.

China will unswervingly adhere to its current virus controls given increasingly serious outbreaks, cadres from the National Health Commission (NHC) said at a highly anticipated briefing on Saturday.

Previous practices have proved that our prevention and control plans and a series of strategic measures are completely correct, Dr Hu Xiang, an official at the NHCs disease prevention and control bureau, told reporters. The policies are also the most economical and effective.

The southern manufacturing hub of Guangzhou found 1,935 cases. Haizhu, the downtown district where most of the cases were detected, is currently under a three-day lockdown announced on Saturday, as the local authorities struggle to reach zero transmission of the virus.

Zhengzhou, the capital of Henan province and home to the worlds largest iPhone factory, reported 297 cases for Sunday, after a lockdown since last week. The citys authorities have pledged to take targeted Covid-19 restrictions, as the NHC named it as one of the places to have implemented overly excessive virus curbs.

Since October, disruptions to the worlds second-largest economy have intensified from central Henan province to Guangdong in the south as infections caused by the Omicron variant spread.

Taiwan-based Foxconn said late on Sunday it would implement new Covid-19 measures at its plant in Zhengzhou, including a system that would involve moving all working employees into three dormitories.

Foxconn, whose production of Apples iPhone 14 models in Zhengzhou has been affected by the curbs, said in a statement on the WeChat account of its Zhengzhou plant that employees would be required to follow a point-to-point system, where they can only move between their dormitories and factory areas. Eight other dormitories will only allow workers to enter, and not exit.

The curbs were being implemented at the request of the government, it said.

Foxconn has been working to retain staff and smooth over tensions in the factory, after workers complained about their treatment and provisions under Covid-19 prevention measures. Many employees have fled the factory, prompting Foxconn to offer generous bonuses to retain staff.

While several events in China have been cancelled or postponed amid the rising cases, some organisers have continued to press ahead.

Some visitors to the China International Import Expo, currently under way in Shanghai, were barred from entering the event venue despite having not left the city in the past two weeks and complying with all health requirements.

One found out that she could not attend only at the entrance when lights flashed red and security guards said their records showed travel history issues. A senior bank executive planning to attend the trade fair on Sunday discovered he was unable to do so, as he worked in his office one day in the preceding week where there was a close-contact case.

At the biannual Zhuhai Airshow in Guangdong, due to kick off on Tuesday, an aviation executive told Reuters he was barred from entering despite having arrived three days earlier to comply with requirements, as he had been in a district in Beijing that has reported cases in the past seven days.

Chinese stocks rallied last week in their biggest weekly gain in more than two years, as investors pumped US$1 trillion (S$1.4 trillion) into the market on hopes of a reopening in the worlds second-biggest economy. But Chinas health authorities doused that speculation on Saturday by reiterating that they would persevere with their approach of clearing Covid-19 cases as soon as they surface. The authorities, however, have been making ongoing if modest tweaks to managing the virus. REUTERS, BLOOMBERG More On This Topic Online outcry after China fails to announce easing of Covid-19 controls ChinasCovid-19 resurgence spurs new curbs; iPhone maker imposes new restrictions Your browser does not support iframes, but you can use the following link: Link Related Stories What you need to know about S'pore's new Covid-19 vaccination strategy Asia stepping up fight against more infectious Covid-19 variants Hong Kong cements Covid-19 tests with centres just a 15-minute walk Covid-19 wave looms in Europe amid vaccine fatigue and false sense of security Long Covid remains a mystery, though theories are emerging askST: What is excess death and what is Covid-19's true toll on the world? Biden says pandemic is over; survivors and doctors disagree No plans to include Covid-19 vaccinations in childhood immunisation schedule: Ong Ye Kung Human development set back 5 years by Covid-19, other crises: UN report Covid-19's harmful effects on the brain reverberate years later: Study

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