China to scrap quarantine for travellers in January

COVID-19

FILE: Medical workers in protective suits attend to COVID-19 patients at the intensive care unit (ICU) of a designated hospital during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Wuhan, Hubei province, China, February 6, 2020. China Daily via REUTERS/File Photo ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. CHINA OUT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY SEARCH "GLOBAL COVID-19" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.

China will scrap quarantine for travellers from January 8, officials said, marking the last major shift from the country’s zero-Covid policy.

After almost three years of closed borders, this will reopen the country to those with work and study visas, or seeking to visit family.

But it comes as China struggles with the virus’ ferocious spread in the wake of restrictions being lifted.

Reports say hospitals are overwhelmed and elderly people are dying.

The true toll—daily case counts and deaths—is currently unknown because officials have stopped releasing COVID data.

Beijing had reported about 4,000 new Covid infections each day last week and few deaths.

According to Reuters, British health data firm Airfinity estimated that China had more than a million infections and 5,000 deaths per day.

China is the last major economy in the world to move to “living with COVID” after three years of lockdowns, closed borders, and mandatory quarantine for COVID cases and contacts.

The so-called “zero-covid” approach battered the economy and made citizens weary of restrictions and repeated tests.

Resentment against the policy exploded into rare public protests against President Xi Jinping in November, which led to authorities dropping COVID rules just a few weeks later.

Closed borders remain the last major restriction. Since March 2020, anyone entering China has to undergo mandatory quarantine at a state facility—for up to three weeks at a time. That was recently reduced to five days.

Related News

But the National Health Commission announced that COVID would be formally downgraded to a Class B infectious disease on January 8.

That meant quarantine would be axed—although incoming travellers will still need to take a PCR test—and a cap on the daily number of flights allowed into China would also be scrapped.

Authorities said they would also “optimise” visa arrangements for foreigners wishing to come to China for work and study, as well as family visits and reunions.

It’s unclear if that includes tourist visas, but officials said a pilot programme would begin for international cruise ships.

The new rules have been welcomed by many Chinese, who will now be able to travel overseas again. The country’s top online travel agencies reported a spike in traffic within hours of the announcement.

But many have also expressed anger over the sudden freedom after years of controls.

“I’m happy about it, but also speechless. If we’re doing this [reopening] anyway – why did I have to suffer all the daily Covid tests and lockdowns this year?” said Rachel Liu, who lives in Shanghai.

She said she had endured three months of lockdown in April, but nearly everyone in her family had become infected with the virus in recent weeks.

She said her parents, grandparents and partner – living across three different cities in Xi’an, Shanghai and Hangzhou – had all come down with fever last week.

Reuters/NAN

Load more