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Mass testing for all 11million residents in Wuhan after worst Covid surge since outbreak sparked panic-buying

AUTHORITIES in the Chinese city of Wuhan has ordered all 11 million residents to be tested after new cases emerged for the first time in a year.

The outbreak has sparked panic buying across the city with locals raiding supermarket shelves in the fear of being forced back into lockdown.

AFPWuhan locals getting tested on Tuesday[/caption]

APAll 11 million Wuhan residents have been ordered to get tested after eight new cases were reported[/caption]

Yesterday the national health commission reported eight new cases in Wuhan – three of which were symptomatic and five asymptomatic.

The city’s health official Li Tao confirmed officials were “swiftly launching comprehensive nucleic acid testing” of all of the city’s 11 million residents.

Wuhan, which gave the world its first glimpses of gruelling lockdowns in the early months of the pandemic, had reported no local coronavirus cases since mid-May last year.

Its strict but successful 76-day lockdown shocked the world but was soon replicated globally.

China brought domestic cases down to virtually zero, allowing the economy to rebound and life to return largely to normal.

But a fresh outbreak has thrown that record into jeopardy as the rapidly-spreading Delta variant reaches 20 cities in more than a dozen provinces.

Nine international airport cleaners in the city of Nanjing are believed to have sparked a chain of cases across the country, with 414 in the past two weeks.

LOCKDOWN ALARM

The National Health Commission said on Tuesday that 90 new cases had been confirmed the previous day.

Millions of people across China have been confined to their homes in response to the outbreak.

Domestic transport links have been cut and mass testing rolled out, with tourists barred in holiday destinations during the peak summer season.

And residents in Wuhan have packed into supermarkets to stock up on groceries and household supplies in preparation for further lockdowns.

Officials on Tuesday vowed to “calm the panicked mood of city residents”, announcing that shops had promised to keep prices and supply chains stable.

‘PANICKED MOOD’

The new cases in the city, along with infections in nearby Jingzhou and Huanggang, were linked to cases found in Huaian city in Jiangsu province, said Li Yang, vice director of Hubei’s provincial disease control centre.

The outbreak in Jiangsu is believed to have begun in the provincial capital of Nanjing, with the Delta variant mostly likely introduced on a flight from Russia, officials have said.

Since then numerous cities in southern China and a few in the north, including Beijing, have reported infections.

Of the 90 new confirmed patients reported on Tuesday, 61 were locally transmitted, the health authority said.


As of August 2, mainland China had recorded 93,193 confirmed cases, with the cumulative death toll unchanged at 4,636.

Labs in the Wuhan have been at the centre of the storm since the virus emerged just a stone’s throw from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which was known to be studying very similar bat viruses.

Shocking biosecurity lapses spanning more than 40 years have led some to question the official Chinese line that the disease was passed from animals to humans – and the lab leak theory is gaining momentum.

AFPCrowds buying items at a supermarket in Wuhan where coronavirus emerged[/caption]

APShelves are empty as residents rush to stock up on necessities in Wuhan[/caption]

APShoppers panic buying after authorities ordered city-wide testing[/caption]

AFPEmpty shelves at a supermarket in Wuhan amid fears of further lockdowns[/caption]

AlamyA medical worker takes a swab sample in Zhengzhou, central China’s Henan Province[/caption]