Mass testing, lockdowns start in Beijing to contain COVID-19 outbreak - Action News
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Mass testing, lockdowns start in Beijing to contain COVID-19 outbreak

China's capital, Beijing, began mass testing of more than 3 million people on Monday and restricted residents in one part of the city to their compounds, sparking worries of a wider Shanghai-style lockdown.

Authorities roll out strict measures under China's 'zero-COVID' approach

Residents line up at a makeshift COVID-19 mass testing site in Beijing on Monday. China is trying to contain a spike in coronavirus cases in the capital after dozens of people tested positive for the virus in recent days. (Tingshu Wang/Reuters)

China's capital,Beijing, began mass testing of more than threemillion people on Monday and restricted residents in one part of the city to their compounds, sparking worries of a wider Shanghai-style lockdown.

While only 70 cases have been found so far in the city of more than 21 million since a new outbreak surfaced Friday, authorities have rolled out strict measures under China's "zero-COVID" approach to try to prevent a further spread of the virus.

Some residents worked from home and many stocked up on food as a safeguard against the possibility that they could be confined indoors, as has happened in multiple cities, including the financial hub of Shanghai. The city of Anyang in central China and Dandong on the border with North Korea also started lockdowns as the Omicron variant spreads across the country.

Shanghai, which has been locked down for more than two weeks, reported more than 19,000 new infections and 51 deaths in the latest 24-hour period, pushing the death toll it has announced from the ongoing outbreak to 138.

People shop for food in a packed supermarket in Chaoyang District on Monday. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

Long lines formed in supermarkets in central Beijing. Shoppers snapped up rice, noodles, vegetables and other food items, while store workers hastily restocked some empty shelves. State media issued reports saying supplies remained plentiful despite the buying surge.

Shoppers appeared concerned but not panicked. One woman, carrying two bags of vegetables, eggs and frozen dumplings, said she was buying a little more than usual. A man said he isn't worried but is being cautious since he has a two-year-old daughter.

Beijing health officials said 29 new cases had been identified in the 24 hours through 4 p.m. Monday, raising the total to 70 since Friday.

Millions need to be tested

The city has ordered mass testing across sprawling Chaoyang district, where 46 of the cases have been found. The 3.5 million residents of Chaoyang, as well as people who work in the district, need to be tested on Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

Testing sites were set up overnight and in the early morning at residential complexes and office buildings around the district.

A woman is swabbed by a health-care worker in Beijing's Chaoyang District. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

"I think Beijing should be fine," said Gao Haiyang as he waited inline for a COVID-19 test. "Based on the previous response made by my community, if there's any emergency, I think supply can be guaranteed. Plus there were lessons we learned from other cities. I think we can make good preparations."

Shanghai has buckled under a strict lockdown that has driven residents to band together to get food delivered through group buying. Goods have backed up at the port of Shanghai, affecting supplies and factory production and crimpingeconomic growth.

Beijing locked down residents in an area of about twobythreekilometres, telling them to work from home and stay in their residential compounds. It wasn't a total lockdown stores continued to operate but cinemas, karaoke bars and other entertainment venues were ordered closed.

Elsewhere, the city also shut down some or all buildings in five residential compounds, adding to others that were locked down on Sunday.