China’s Covid-19 outbreaks force caution as Lunar New Year travel rush begins
- Government pushes initiatives to limit and discourage movement during the traditional migration period
- Transport ministry estimates 1.2 billion trips will be made over the 40-day holiday season, a 60 per cent drop from 2019
The authorities announced 54 new coronavirus infections on Thursday, 41 of them locally transmitted, while the National Health Commission (NHC) said nearly 23 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines had so far been administered. The NHC aims to have 50 million people immunised before the week-long Lunar New Year in mid-February.
The transport ministry estimated on Thursday that about 1.2 billion trips would be made over the holiday period – about 60 per cent fewer than in 2019.
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“The passenger flow during the Spring Festival this year will be significantly reduced,” a transport ministry spokesman Wu Chungeng said at a media briefing.
To make avoiding travel more appealing, the government has encouraged online video services to provide free film screenings. It has also asked public venues and entertainment premises to stay open, including libraries, museums, theatres, parks and sports stadiums. Shops have been urged to open for at least eight hours a day during the festival.
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People living in areas designated as high-risk – under some form of lockdown – are forbidden from travelling, while the NHC requires those travelling from medium-risk zones to present a negative Covid-19 test result from the previous three days.
In low-risk areas, workers who handle imported frozen food, have direct contact with imported goods at ports and operate quarantine sites need to get tested for Covid-19 within the week before they travel.
People planning to head to Beijing face stricter rules. In addition to needing a negative test result within a week before they reach the capital, they must get tested again seven and 14 days after arrival. During that first two weeks, they are not allowed to join group gatherings.
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Railway stations and airports nationally have stepped up their precautions. Tianjin Binhai International Airport, for example, allocated separate parking aprons and baggage reclaim areas for flights from medium and high-risk areas.
The airport reported about a 50 per cent drop in passenger traffic on Thursday compared with the usual first-day figure for the holiday season.