As COVID cases soar in Shanghai, citizens plead for basic essentials like food, medicines

By Team NewsableFirst Published Apr 5, 2022, 3:16 PM IST
Highlights

Cries for aid flooded social media this weekend before being erased by censors, as the city's case count surpassed that of Hong Kong, which had the highest death rate in the world in March.

Food and medicine shortages have left residents in China's largest metropolis anxious and disgruntled as officials fight to contain a COVID-19 epidemic. Shanghai, obliged to apply Beijing's strict "dynamic zero" Covid approach, conducted two four-day lockdowns on each side of the Huangpu River. However, when the number of cases of the infectious Omicron increased fast, officials tightened restrictions on portions of the city's financial zone in eastern Pudong.

Cries for aid flooded social media this weekend before being erased by censors, as the city's case count surpassed that of Hong Kong, which had the highest death rate in the world in March.

Also Read | China: Shanghai imposes lockdown to curb COVID-19 outbreak

Parents also begged for assistance after being removed from their young children if they or their children tested positive. According to state media, Zeng Qun, deputy chief of the Shanghai Civil Affairs Bureau, temporary guardians will be sought for children who were not affected but were forced to stay at home alone after their parents were transported to quarantine centres.

Another video has leaked of 200 kids locked up in COVID quarantine at the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center. The kids have been separated from their parents. There is only 10 nurses taking care of 200 kids.The Chinese Communist Party is reportedly trying to censor all videos pic.twitter.com/uASexLmW8S

— WakeUpHumans (@Thunderace4)

China has been in lockdown for almost 2 months. Shanghai for 7 weeks. Testing everyone every 2 days. Children removed from homes as young as 2. Why isn't the media screaming this from the rooftops!

— MadeinNz (@NMadeinNZ)

Last week, EU states urged local authorities to avoid separating children from their parents and to provide adequate treatment for those with non-Covid emergency medical conditions.

Also Read | 'Stay indoors, leave only to get COVID test': China's Shanghai tightens lockdown rules

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