Asia

Shanghai Battles Food Shortages Under Strict Virus Lockdown

People in China's business district are complaining that grocers are run dry and government officials are slow to get them supplies during lockdown.

Grocery delivery man in Shanghai, China
Chen Si / AP
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Residents of Shanghai are struggling to get meat, rice and other food supplies under anti-coronavirus controls that confine most of its 25 million people in their homes, fueling frustration as the government tries to contain a spreading outbreak.

People in China's business capital complain online grocers often are sold out. Some received government food packages of meat and vegetables for a few days. But with no word on when they will be allowed out, anxiety is rising.

Shanghai highlights the soaring human and economic cost of China's “zero-COVID” strategy that aims to isolate every infected person.

Shanghai To Allow Some Parents To Stay With COVID-Infected Kids
Shanghai To Allow Some Parents To Stay With COVID-Infected Kids

Shanghai To Allow Some Parents To Stay With COVID-Infected Kids

A top city health official said at a news conference that parents can apply to stay with children with "special needs."

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On Thursday, the government reported 23,107 new cases nationwide, all but 1,323 of which had no symptoms. That included 19,989 in Shanghai, where only 329 had symptoms. Complaints about food shortages began after Shanghai closed segments of the city on March 28.

Plans called for four-day closures of districts while residents were tested. That changed to an indefinite citywide shutdown after case numbers soared. Shoppers who got little warning stripped supermarket shelves.

Officials say Shanghai, home of the world’s busiest port and China’s main stock exchange, has enough food. But a deputy mayor, Chen Tong, acknowledged Thursday getting it the “last 100 meters” to households is a challenge.

After residents of a Shanghai apartment complex stood on their balconies to sing this week in a possible protest, a drone flew overhead and broadcast the message: “Control the soul’s desire for freedom and do not open the window to sing. This behavior has the risk of spreading the epidemic.”

The government says it is trying to reduce the impact of its tactics, but authorities still are enforcing curbs that also block access to the industrial cities of Changchun and Jilin with millions of residents in the northeast.

Additional reporting by The Associated Press.