Tag: Wuhan

  • Retired Chinese protest over health benefits cuts

    Retired Chinese protest over health benefits cuts

    Chinese retirees have once again gathered in large numbers to protest the reduction of their medical benefits.


    They gathered yet again on Wednesday in the cities of Dalian in the northeast and Wuhan, where Covid was first discovered.

    Just weeks away from the annual National People’s Congress, which will elect a new leadership team, the second round of protests in seven days puts pressure on President Xi Jinping’s administration.

    After provincial authorities announced they were reducing the amount of medical expenses retirees can claim back from the government, protests first broke out in Wuhan on February 8.

    The majority of the protesters, according to social media footage, are elderly retirees who claim this is a response to the rising cost of healthcare.

    Although such health insurance matters are handled at a provincial level, protests have spread to different parts of the country in what appears to be a renewed belief in the power of demonstrating in China.

    At the end of last year, thousands of young Chinese took part in protests that eventually forced the government to overturn its strict zero-Covid measures – people had grown weary of the mass testing and sudden, sweeping lockdowns that had been smashing the economy.

    But the abrupt change in policy placed China’s medical system under enormous strain, as the coronavirus quickly spread through the country. It led to an unknown number of deaths and reporting by the BBC appeared to show that a vast majority of those who died were elderly.

    The changes to health benefits for retirees, which officials have described as “reforms,” come just as China emerges from that brutal Covid wave.

    The plan has been sold as a means of trading off reimbursement levels to increase the scope of coverage to include more areas. However criticism of plan on social media has included the widely held view that Chinese officials are trying to recoup the vast amounts of money spent on compulsory Covid testing and other pandemic measures.

    Officials in both Wuhan and Dalian said they had no knowledge of the most recent protests and, as such, had no comment to make. Calls to local police stations went unanswered.

    Radio Free Asia reported that retired iron and steel workers made up a significant proportion of the original protest group in Wuhan.

    The use of existing social network links could help to explain how these gatherings have been coordinated in a country where organising dissent against the government in any form is difficult and can lead to severe punishment, including prison sentences.

    Video clips shared on social media showed elderly protestors singing the global Communist anthem, the Internationale. In the past, this song has been used as a means of indicating that demonstrators are not against the government or the Communist Party but merely want their grievances resolved.

    A shopkeeper who witnessed this Wednesday’s protest in Wuhan told the BBC that police on both sides of a nearby road had blocked access to the area in order to prevent more people joining the hundreds of elderly demonstrators who were already chanting slogans.

    Three years of the pandemic crisis followed by a tumultuous exit from zero-Covid have generated considerable public discontent over China’s health policies.

    Staff members in protective suits conduct COVID-19 nuclei acid tests at a residential area on January 2, 2022 in Xi'an, Shaanxi Province of China.
    Image caption,China’s zero-Covid measures involved mass testing

    Mr Xi had given the country’s Covid amelioration policies his personal stamp of approval and the Party has struggled to explain why such a sudden about-face was necessary.

    The Chinese government had also publicly ridiculed other countries for opening up too early, claiming they had unnecessarily sacrificed their people as a result.

    It then turned around and abandoned its own restrictions at an even greater speed than other nations had done, and did so after maintaining lockdowns and other harsh measures for much longer than anywhere else in the world.

    Many here now believe that, as a result, livelihoods were unnecessarily destroyed.

    On China’s Twitter-like Weibo social media platform, the hashtag #healthinsurance – in Chinese – has attracted millions of hits but was removed from the site’s “hot topics” section.

    The hashtag matching the site of the most recent protests in Wuhan – Zhongshan Park – was censored and photos claiming to be of the demonstration have been removed.

    However, even with China’s vast censorship apparatus swinging into action, a large amount of support is still being expressed for the protesting retirees on social media.

    Beijing will need to find a way to resolve the issue if it wants to avoid further public agitation.

  • Widow of Wuhan whistleblower doctor Li Wenliang gives birth to their son

    The wife of Li Wenliang, the Wuhan whistleblower doctor who died of coronavirus in February, has given birth to their son, according to the Chinese state-run Litchi News.

    Li’s wife told Litchi News early Friday morning local time that she gave birth to a baby boy in a Wuhan hospital.

    “Can you see it from heaven? The last gift you gave me was born today. I will definitely take good care of them,” she wrote on the Chinese social media platform WeChat.

    Li was a doctor in the Chinese city of Wuhan, which was ground zero for the coronavirus pandemic.

    In late December, when reports emerged of a dangerous new virus in the city, he texted fellow medical school alumni warning them of the news.

    “I only wanted to remind my university classmates to be careful,” he told CNN in February.

    Soon after, he was targeted by Wuhan police, who accused him of rumor-mongering.

    He was made to sign a statement acknowledging his “misdemeanor” and promising not to commit further “unlawful acts.”

    On February 1, he tested positive for the virus. He died less than a week later, aged 34 – sparking a rare online wave of grief, fury, calls for freedom of speech and government accountability.

    Source: cnn.com

  • Mumbai overtakes Wuhan peak as India Covid cases spike

    India’s financial capital, Mumbai, has recorded 51,000 cases of COVID-19, taking it past the peak in Wuhan, where the virus first emerged.

    The news comes amid a surge of infections in India, which has 266,598 confirmed cases.

    Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital, has 90,000 of them.

    Infections are also spiking in the capital Delhi, where authorities have said they expect to see more than half a million cases by the end of July.

    The surge coincides with India’s decision to relax restrictions after three months of a stringent lockdown that was intended to curb the spread of the virus.

    On 8 June, shopping malls, places of worship and offices were allowed to reopen. Before that, shops, market places and transport services had all been allowed to operate as well.

    But experts say that there was no other option but to lift the lockdown, which exacted a massive economic toll on the country.

    Millions have already lost their jobs and livelihoods, businesses are shutting down, and the fear of hunger drove masses of daily-wage migrant workers to flee cities -mostly on foot because public transport was halted overnight.

    Many of them died of exhaustion and starvation, in what has been called a human tragedy.

    For weeks, India’s relatively low Covid-19 numbers had baffled experts. Despite the dense population, disease and underfunded public hospitals, there was no deluge of infections or fatalities.

    Low testing rates explained the former, but not the latter. The hope – which also encouraged the government to lift the lockdown – was that most of India’s undetected infections would not be severe enough to require hospitalisation.

    But the number of rising cases shows that the country could simply be witnessing a late peak in cases, experts say.

    What is concerning them however, is that even though states were using the lockdown period to ramp up health facilities, hospitals in major cities are being overwhelmed. There are allegations that many patients with Covid-like symptoms are being turned away.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Wuhan to test entire population after new virus cluster – State media

    Wuhan plans to conduct coronavirus tests on the Chinese city’s entire population after new cases emerged for the first time in weeks in the cradle of the global pandemic, state media reported Tuesday.

    Officials had been ordered to submit by noon on Tuesday plans to administer nucleic acid tests on all residents in the city of 11 million people, according to an official notice carried by news outlets.

    “Each district should make plans and arrangements to conduct nucleic acid tests on the entire population in its jurisdiction within a 10-day time limit,” the notice said, although it was unclear when testing would begin.

    The planned tests come after Wuhan reported the first cluster of new COVID-19 infections since the city re-opened after a 76-day lockdown on April 8.

    Six new cases were reported on Sunday and Monday from a residential compound in Dongxihu District.

    But an official from the Dongxihu District epidemic prevention and control commanding office told AFP that they have “not yet received news about this notice”.

    China has largely brought the virus under control, but it has been on edge about being hit by a second wave as it has lifted lockdowns and restrictions across the country.

    Virus clusters have appeared recent weeks in the northeastern provinces of Jilin and Heilongjiang, which border Russia.

    With the virus taking hold in other nations, China has barred most foreigners from entering the country.

    Wuhan has reported 3,869 deaths since the novel coronavirus first emerged there in December, accounting for most fatalities in China. Scientists believe the virus jumped from animals to humans at a market that sold wildlife in the city.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: Wuhan draws up plans to test all 11 million residents

    The Chinese city of Wuhan is drawing up plans to test its entire population of 11 million people for Covid-19, state media report.

    The plan appears to be in its early stages, with all districts in Wuhan told to submit details as to how testing could be done within 10 days.

    It comes after Wuhan, where the virus first emerged, recorded six new cases over the weekend.

    Prior to this, it had seen no new cases at all since 3 April.

    Wuhan, which was in strict lockdown for 11 weeks, began re-opening on 8 April.

    For a while it seemed like life was getting back to normal as schools re-opened, businesses slowly emerged and public transport resumed operations. But the emergence of a cluster of cases – all from the same residential compound – has now threatened the move back to normalcy.

    ‘The ten-day-battle’

    According to a report by The Paper, quoting a widely circulated internal document, every district in the city has been told to draw up a 10-day testing plan by noon on Tuesday.

    Each district is responsible for coming up with its own plan based on the size of their population and whether or not there is currently an active outbreak in the district.

    The document, which refers to the test plan as the “10-day battle”, also says that older people and densely populated communities should be prioritised when it comes to testing.

    However several senior health officials quoted by the Global Times newspaper indicated that testing the entire city would be unfeasible and costly.

    Peng Zhiyong, director of the intensive care unit of the Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, instead that testing was instead likely to be targeted at medical workers, vulnerable people and those who’d had close contacts with a case.

    Another Wuhan University director suggested that a large percentage of Wuhan’s population – around 3-5 million – had already been tested, and Wuhan was “capable” of testing the remaining 6-8 million in a 10-days period.

    To put the goal into context, the US now conducts around 300,000 tests each day, according to the White House. So far, it’s tested almost 9 million people in total.

    On Chinese social media site Weibo, people have been raising questions about whether such a large number of tests can be carried out in just a matter of days.

    “It is impossible to test so many people,” said one commenter, who also questioned how much it would cost.

    Another said that such tests should have been carried out before Wuhan re-opened its doors to the rest of China.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Wuhan lockdown ends, markets drop

    Here are the latest developments from Asia related to the Novel Coronavirus pandemic:

    – Joy as exodus from Wuhan begins –

    Voicing joy and excitement from behind face masks, tens of thousands of people fled Wuhan after a 76-day travel ban was lifted on the Chinese city where the coronavirus first emerged.

    Previously quiet train and bus stations bustled as an exodus began from the city of 11 million, with some passengers wearing hazmat suits.

    Up to 55,000 people are expected to leave Wuhan on Wednesday just by train, according to government estimates.

    – Markets drop after two-day rally –

    Most Asian equities retreated after a two-day rally as investors closely track developments in the coronavirus crisis, while the oil market continued to fluctuate ahead of a crucial producers’ meeting.

    While the deadly disease continues to sweep across the planet, signs that the rate of infections is possibly levelling out and countries are preparing to ease some lockdown restrictions have instilled a semblance of optimism this week.

    – Chinese city locked down after influx of imported cases –

    A Chinese city on the Russian border has placed residents under lockdown after an influx of imported cases in nationals returning from Russia.

    Suifenhe city in northeastern Heilongjiang province has tightened controls on residential compounds starting Wednesday after a flurry of new cases.

    – Korean Air puts 70 percent of staff on leave –

    South Korea’s flag carrier Korean Air will put 70 percent of its 19,000 staff on furlough, it said, as it scrambles to cope with the pandemic that has almost grounded global aviation.

    The airline industry is among the sectors worst hit by the virus and the ensuing travel restrictions, with thousands of flights cancelled, routes cut, and companies facing financial turmoil.

    – Virus stops play at Trump-opened mega cricket stadium –

    There is no larger symbol of the global sports shutdown than cricket’s 110,000-seater Sardar Patel Stadium in Ahmedabad, opened by US President Donald Trump, but yet to see a ball bowled.

    India’s newest and the world’s biggest cricket stadium lies empty because of the coronavirus pandemic.

    – Party pooper: Singapore bans soirees –

    Singapore is banning “private parties and social get-togethers”, according to the health ministry, the latest tough measure implemented in the city-state to halt the spread of the virus.

    The step was included in a bill passed through parliament Tuesday, the same day that new restrictions kicked in which include the closure of most workplaces for a month.

    Source: AFP

  • Coronavirus cradle Wuhan partly reopens after lockdown

    The city in China where the coronavirus pandemic began, Wuhan, has partially re-opened after more than two months of isolation.

    Crowds of passengers were pictured arriving at Wuhan train station on Saturday.

    People are being allowed to enter but not leave, according to reports.

    Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, saw more than 50,000 coronavirus cases. At least 3,000 people in Hubei died from the disease.

    But numbers have fallen dramatically, according to China’s figures. On Saturday the province reported 54 new cases emerging the previous day – which it said were all imported.

    As it battles to control cases coming from abroad, China has announced a temporary ban on all foreign visitors, even if they have visas or residence permits. It is also limiting Chinese and foreign airlines to one flight per week, and flights must not be more than 75% full.

    In other global developments: Meanwhile, the virus continues to spread rapidly in other countries around the world.

    · More than 600,000 infections have been confirmed globally and almost 29,000 deaths, according to figures collated by Johns Hopkins University. Nearly 136,000 patients have recovered

    · The death toll in Spain has exceeded 5,000, after it reported 832 more fatalities in the past 24 hours. Spain is the world’s worst hit country after Italy

    · The US now has the highest number of confirmed infections at 104,000

    · South Korea says that for the first time it now has more people who have recovered from the virus than are still infected. It reported 146 new cases on Saturday, taking the total to 9,478 – of whom 4,811 have been released from hospital

    · Russia and Ireland are among the latest countries to bring in new restrictions to try to slow the spread of the virus. In Russia, shopping centres, restaurants and cafes have been ordered to close. In Ireland, people will have to stay at home with limited exceptions for the next two weeks

    · In the UK, frontline National Health Service staff in England will begin being tested this weekend to see if they have coronavirus

    What signs are there of Wuhan reopening? The virus is thought to have originated in a seafood market in Wuhan that “conducted illegal transactions of wild animals”.

    The city’s 11 million residents have been shut off from the rest of the world since the middle of January, with roadblocks around the outskirts and drastic restrictions on daily life.

    But roads reopened to incoming traffic late on Friday, according to Reuters news agency.

    And state media said the subway was open from Saturday and trains would be able to arrive at the city’s 17 railway stations.

    Nineteen-year-old student Guo Liangkai, who arrived back in the city after three months, told Reuters: “First of all, it makes me very happy to see my family.

    “We wanted to hug but now is a special period so we can’t hug or make any actions like these.”

    All arrivals in Wuhan have to show a green code on a mobile app to prove that they are healthy.

    Officials say restrictions on people leaving the city will be lifted on 8 April, when domestic flights are also expected to restart.

    The virus emerged in China in December and more than 3,300 people there have died from the infection – but both Italy and Spain now have higher death tolls.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus cradle Wuhan partly reopens after lockdown

    The city in China where the coronavirus pandemic began, Wuhan, has partially re-opened after more than two months of isolation.

    Crowds of passengers were pictured arriving at Wuhan train station on Saturday.

    People are being allowed to enter but not leave, according to reports.

    Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, saw more than 50,000 coronavirus cases. At least 3,000 people in Hubei died from the disease.

    But numbers have fallen dramatically, according to China’s figures. The state on Saturday reported 54 new cases emerging the previous day – which it said were all imported.

    As it battles to control cases coming from abroad, China has announced a temporary ban on all foreign visitors, even if they have visas or residence permits. It is also limiting Chinese and foreign airlines to one flight per week, and flights must not be more than 75% full.

    In other global developments:

    Meanwhile, the virus continues to spread rapidly in other countries around the world.

    • Nearly 600,000 infections have been confirmed globally and almost 28,000 deaths, according to figures collated by Johns Hopkins University
    • The death toll in Spain has exceeded 5,000, after it reported 832 more fatalities in the past 24 hours. Spain is the world’s worst hit country after Italy
    • The US now has the highest number of confirmed infections at 104,000
    • South Korea says that for the first time it now has more people who have recovered from the virus than are still infected. It reported 146 new cases on Saturday, taking the total to 9,478 – of whom 4,811 have been released from hospital
    • Russia and Ireland are among the latest countries to bring in new restrictions to try to slow the spread of the virus. In Russia, shopping centres, restaurants and cafes have been ordered to close. In Ireland, people will have to stay at home with limited exceptions for the next two weeks
    • In the UK, frontline National Health Service staff in England will begin being tested this weekend to see if they have coronavirus

    What signs are there of Wuhan reopening?

    The virus is thought to have originated in a seafood market in Wuhan that “conducted illegal transactions of wild animals”.

    The city’s 11 million residents have been shut off from the rest of the world since the middle of January, with roadblocks around the outskirts and drastic restrictions on daily life.

    Media captionCoronavirus: Life inside China’s lockdown

    But roads reopened to incoming traffic late on Friday, according to Reuters news agency.

    And state media said the subway was open from Saturday and trains would be able to arrive at the city’s 17 railway stations.

    Nineteen-year-old student Guo Liangkai, who arrived back in the city after three months, told Reuters: “First of all, it makes me very happy to see my family.

    “We wanted to hug but now is a special period so we can’t hug or make any actions like these.”

    Mask-clad passengers wait in a line after arriving at the railway station in Wuhan, China's central Hubei province on 28 March 2020Image copyrightAFP
    Image captionMask-clad passengers waited in a line after arriving at the railway station in Wuhan on Saturday

    All arrivals in Wuhan have to show a green code on a mobile app to prove that they are healthy.

    Officials say restrictions on people leaving the city will be lifted on 8 April, when domestic flights are also expected to restart.

    The virus emerged in China in December and more than 3,300 people there have died from the infection – but both Italy and Spain now have higher death tolls.

    Coronavirus global cases, 28 March 2020

    This information is regularly updated but may not reflect the latest totals for each country.

    Cases Deaths
    USA 104,688 1,707
    Italy 86,498 9,134
    China 81,996 3,299
    Spain 72,248 5,690
    Germany 53,340 399
    Iran 35,408 2,517
    France 32,964 1,995
    UK 14,549 759
    Switzerland 13,259 241
    South Korea 9,478 144
    Belgium 9,134 353
    Netherlands 8,603 546
    Austria 7,712 68
    Turkey 5,698 92
    Canada 4,760 56
    Portugal 4,268 76
    Norway 3,807 20
    Australia 3,640 460
    Brazil 3,477 93
    Israel 3,460 12
    Sweden 3,069 105
    Czech Republic 2,422 9
    Malaysia 2,320 27
    Ireland 2,121 22
    Denmark 2,046 52
    Ecuador 1,627 41
    Chile 1,610 5
    Luxembourg 1,605 15
    Japan 1,525 52
    Romania 1,452 29
    Poland 1,436 16
    Pakistan 1,408 11
    Russia 1,264 4
    Thailand 1,245 6
    South Africa 1,170 1
    Finland 1,165 7
    Indonesia 1,155 102
    Saudi Arabia 1,104 3
    Philippines 1,075 68
    Greece 966 28
    India 933 20
    Iceland 890 2
    Panama 786 14
    Singapore 732 2
    Mexico 717 12
    Diamond Princess cruise ship 712 10
    Argentina 690 17
    Slovenia 684 9
    Estonia 645 1
    Croatia 635 4
    Peru 635 11
    Dominican Republic 581 20
    Qatar 562
    Colombia 539 6
    Egypt 536 30
    Serbia 528 1
    Iraq 506 42
    Bahrain 473 4
    New Zealand 451
    Lebanon 412 8
    Algeria 409 26
    United Arab Emirates 405 2
    Lithuania 382 5
    Armenia 372 1
    Morocco 358 23
    Hungary 343 11
    Bulgaria 313 5
    Ukraine 311 8
    Latvia 305
    Taiwan 283 2
    Uruguay 274
    Slovakia 269
    Andorra 267 3
    Costa Rica 263 2
    Bosnia and Herzegovina 257 4
    Kuwait 235
    Jordan 235 1
    Tunisia 227 7
    San Marino 223 21
    North Macedonia 219 3
    Kazakhstan 204 1
    Moldova 199 2
    Albania 186 8
    Burkina Faso 180 9
    Vietnam 169
    Azerbaijan 165 3
    Cyprus 162 5
    Oman 152
    Malta 149
    Réunion 145
    Faroe Islands 144
    Ghana 137 4
    Senegal 130
    Brunei 120 1
    Venezuela 113 2
    Sri Lanka 110
    Afghanistan 110 4
    Uzbekistan 104 2
    Ivory Coast 101
    Cambodia 99
    Palestinian Territories 97 1
    Honduras 95 1
    Mauritius 94 2
    Belarus 94
    Martinique 93 1
    Cameroon 91 2
    Kosovo 88 1
    Georgia 85
    Montenegro 82 1
    Nigeria 81 1
    Cuba 80 2
    Puerto Rico 79 3
    Bolivia 74
    Guadeloupe 73 1
    Trinidad and Tobago 66 2
    Kyrgyzstan 58
    DR Congo 58 6
    Liechtenstein 56
    Paraguay 56 3
    Gibraltar 55
    Rwanda 54
    Jersey 52 1
    Guam 51 1
    Mayotte 50
    Bangladesh 48 5
    Monaco 42
    Guernsey 36
    Aruba 33
    Isle of Man 32
    Guatemala 32 1
    Kenya 31 1
    French Polynesia 30
    Jamaica 30 1
    French Guiana 28
    Barbados 26
    Madagascar 26
    Togo 25 1
    Uganda 23
    Zambia 22
    United States Virgin Islands 19
    El Salvador 19
    Bermuda 17
    Ethiopia 16
    Maldives 16
    New Caledonia 15
    Tanzania 13
    Mongolia 12
    Djibouti 12
    Equatorial Guinea 12
    Saint Martin 11
    Mali 11
    Dominica 11
    Niger 10 1
    Greenland 10
    Bahamas 10
    Eswatini 9
    Curaçao 8 1
    Cayman Islands 8 1
    Haiti 8
    Suriname 8
    Myanmar 8
    Namibia 8
    Guinea 8
    Gabon 7 1
    Zimbabwe 7 1
    Mozambique 7
    Antigua and Barbuda 7
    Seychelles 7
    Grenada 7
    Eritrea 6
    Laos 6
    Benin 6
    Nepal 5
    Fiji 5
    Saint Barthelemy 5
    Syria 5
    Mauritania 5
    Guyana 5 1
    Montserrat 5
    Sudan 5 1
    Cape Verde 5 1
    Congo 4
    Angola 4
    Vatican 4
    Nicaragua 4 1
    Central African Republic 3
    Somalia 3
    Bhutan 3
    Liberia 3
    Sint Maarten 3
    Chad 3
    Saint Lucia 3
    Gambia 3 1
    Turks and Caicos Islands 2
    Belize 2
    Anguilla 2
    MS Zaandam cruise ship 2
    British Virgin Islands 2
    Saint Kitts and Nevis 2
    Guinea-Bissau 2
    Libya 1
    St Vincent and the Grenadines 1
    Papua New Guinea 1
    Timor-Leste 1

    Source: Johns Hopkins University, national public health agencies

    Last updated on 28 March 2020, 12:00 GMT.

    It is now battling to control a wave of imported cases as infections soar abroad.

    This so-called “second wave” of imported infections is also affecting countries like South Korea and Singapore, which had been successful in stopping the spread of disease in recent weeks.

    A general shot shot shows buildings in Wuhan, in China's central Hubei province on 28 March 2020.Image copyrightAFP
    Image captionWuhan has been under lockdown since the middle of January

    Source: BBC 

  • Coronavirus birthplace Wuhan reports zero new infections for first time

    The central Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicentre of the country’s coronavirus outbreak, reported no new infections for the first time, while imported cases surged by a record, led by new infections in the capital of Beijing.

    The new imported infections also accounted for all of the new confirmed cases in mainland China, placing more pressure on authorities to screen travellers at key travel hubs.

    Mainland China had 34 new confirmed cases on Wednesday, the country’s National Health Commission said, more than doubling from 13 cases a day earlier.

    Of the 34 imported infections, Beijing accounted for 21 cases, a daily record for the city.

    That brings the total number of confirmed cases in mainland China so far to 80,928, the health authority said in a statement on Thursday.

    The death toll from the outbreak in mainland China had reached 3,245 as of the end of Wednesday, up by eight from the previous day.

    In the central province of Hubei, there were eight new deaths, with the provincial capital of Wuhan accounting for six of the fatalities.

    Source: reuters.com