China: Video shows frustration of Shanghai residents amid COVID-19 lockdown
Shanghai: Several videos have gone viral on social media platforms in recent times where people could be seen screaming from their apartment against the lockdown imposed in Shanghai to curb rising COVID-19 cases.
The video reflected the frustration of the people due to the lockdown.
Shanghai, one of the key cities of the country, has been put under lockdown since Apr 5 to control the spread of the infection as part of the country's “zero COVID” policy.
Well-known public health scientist, US-based Dr Eric Feigl-Ding, posted a video and wrote: "Residents in #Shanghai screaming from high rise apartments after 7 straight days of the city lockdown. The narrator worries that there will be major problems. (in Shanghainese dialect—he predicts people can’t hold out much longer—he implies tragedy)."
BREAKING—China’s grip on BA2. At least 23 cities in China on full or partial lockdown—cities with over 193 million residents. Food shortages throughout even Shanghai. Doctors and nurses also exhausted—this doctor collapsed, and was carried off by patients at an isolation center. pic.twitter.com/raJlRNEezC
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) April 9, 2022
China has detected record 27,595 new cases of Covid-19, with the majority revealed in Shanghai, the National Health Commission said on Monday.
In the past 24 hours, China has registered 1,184 patients with Covid-19 symptoms and 26,411 asymptomatic cases.
The highest incidence of 914 cases with symptoms and 25,173 asymptomatic ones has been detected in Shanghai, which is now under a strict lockdown. China pursues a stringent zero-Covid policy, which is now tested by the wave of the Omicron strain.
Shanghai has faced a surge in Covid-19 infections in recent weeks, and the authorities redirected some international passenger flights to other Chinese cities from March 21 to May 1 to relieve the Covid-19 prevention and control sector.
Residents in #Shanghai screaming from high rise apartments after 7 straight days of the city lockdown. The narrator worries that there will be major problems. (in Shanghainese dialect—he predicts people can’t hold out much longer—he implies tragedy).pic.twitter.com/jsQt6IdQNh
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) April 10, 2022
The coronavirus spike in China began early March, since then the infection rate has grown rapidly, with over 20,000 cases registered daily over the last three days in a row.
This constitutes an unprecedented surge since the outbreak of the pandemic in China, which over the last two years registered an average of 30-40 cases per day.
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