China faces moment of truth on its zero-Covid-19 policy amid public defiance, pandemic fatigue

For local governments, it is a burning question that awaits a clear answer. If Beijing’s ultimate goal continues to require rooting out virus transmissions in communities as quickly as possible, local authorities have no choice but to maintain universal testing, impose snap lockdowns and drag patients into makeshift hospitals deemed by some people as “coronavirus gulags” that often consist of hundreds of beds crammed together under one big roof.

A number of Chinese cities, including Shanghai, have even imposed fresh restrictions, such as keeping domestic travellers away from restaurants and pubs – a clumsy upgrade of a similar three-day ban in Hong Kong directed at international arrivals. That means tourists at the Shanghai Disney Resort can have fun taking rides and watching character parades, but they cannot dine in indoor restaurants.

Yet under the new “20 measures”, local authorities are explicitly told to refrain from imposing additional restrictions. In other words, they are directed to steer left even when the destination is on the right. Some grass-roots officials have resorted to the informal way of governance by giving out verbal instructions for lockdowns so as to leave no written evidence for people to file complaints to higher-level authorities.

Such tricks, however, have backfired as residents under lockdowns demanded proof of authorisation. In Beijing, several communities tried to negotiate over the weekend with grass-roots Communist Party committees, which are legally self-organised bodies without government authority, to lift lockdowns. Piece by piece, China’s zero-Covid system is crumbling under its own weight.

Workers in protective gear in Beijing on Monday. Photo: Bloomberg

Workers in protective gear in Beijing on Monday. Photo: Bloomberg

It has been a year since the World Health Organization declared the arrival of Omicron, calling it a new and different variant that would change the pandemic trajectory. Since then, many countries are forced to, or have voluntarily chosen to give up on zero-Covid-19 as a strategy.

But China, which achieved stellar performance in minimising death while maintaining economic growth in 2021, neglected the warnings and doubled down on its approach, wrongly assuming that Omicron would make no difference.

China earlier this year budgeted a 5.5 per cent GDP growth target for 2022, a clear sign of excessive confidence, and it briefly pushed for mainland-style universal testing in Hong Kong. In May, the government promptly quashed debates about Shanghai’s painful two-month lockdown by declaring war against any words or actions that “doubt, distort and negate” zero-Covid.

A lot of things have happened over the past year. China’s pursuit of zero-Covid is losing support and no longer resonates with the great majority of the population, who have had enough lockdowns and testing. It is time for Beijing to face the reality and make the right choice.

South China Morning Post

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