Discontent grows in closed Shanghai and fear of supply chain disruption sets in | International

The severe confinements have brought supply problems to millions of Chinese citizens, but the country’s capital is not the only one facing this situation: last night, the Hunan authorities decided to confine several areas of Zhengzhou, where – for example – the largest global iPhone assembly plant.

After two weeks of general confinement, which in some cases goes back more than a month, the signs of discontent in Shanghai are multiplying but they fail to break the authorities’ firm commitment to “covid zero”.

The number of infections has not yet stabilized in the country’s largest city, and its main economic center, but it is going down in other major outbreaks, such as that in Jilin province, confined and isolated from the entire country before than Shanghai.

The National Health Commission reported 3,590 cases in Shanghai this Saturday, to which are added almost 20,000 asymptomatic cases that are not included in the official statistics of infections..

the eternal confinement

But the annoyance only increases in the metropolis of 26 million inhabitants, despite announcements that restrictions will be relaxed in areas without contagion.

Although the authorities said that the inhabitants of housing complexes where there had been no case of covid-19 in fifteen days might go out on the street as they are considered “low risk”, the truth is that thousands can live in each community. of people, which triggers the possibility that there is a positive.

This means that a single contagion in the complex puts the counter to zero for all the neighbors, which implies another fifteen days of confinement.

Thus, scenes of confrontation of the inhabitants of Shanghai with the police and health workers continue to leak to Western social networks almost at the same speed at which they are censored and deleted from Chinese platforms, where both Twitter and Facebook or Instagram are vetoed.

Among the most notorious, a video in which residents of some state apartments for “talents” from different sectors confront the authorities following being evicted from their homes to turn them into isolation centers for covid-19 patients or close contacts.

Neighbors put together group food orders

Given the serious supply problems that some sectors of the population have suffered in the last two weeks, the new popular heroes are the neighbors who coordinate and manage group orders for food and other essential products..

Frank, a 32-year-old producer whose case is reported by the newspaper “South China Morning Post”, has become the savior of his community of a thousand people, many of them elderly who do not handle new technologies well.

The newspaper also cites a blogger who managed to organize an order for 10,000 eggs for her housing complex, and also cites Davida Wu, a 35-year-old investor who has also taken the reins to supply her neighbors.

“We have decided to look for life. There is too much uncertainty to trust the outside. We can’t wait forever,” the woman declared.

What happened in Shanghai has raised alarms in the rest of China, where fear of mass confinements and possible shortage problems has skyrocketing sales of refrigerators, freezers and even vegetable seeds to grow at home.

During the first quarter of the year, seed sales on the most used e-commerce platforms, such as Taobao, reached record figures of up to 100% more than the previous year, according to the official newspaper “Global Times”.

“Growing vegetables on China’s balconies has become a new fad, especially in the midst of outbreaks of covid-19. Many people have started growing vegetables hydroponically due to the shortage of vegetables caused by the pandemic.

industry in check

The massive confinements are also having an impact on the industry, with stoppages in factories and transport that have set off the alarms of industries such as technology or the automobile industry, whose managers have warned that if the situation continues, supply chains will be affected..

On Friday night, the local authorities of the province of Henan (center) decided to confine several areas of the economic area of ​​the Zhengzhou airport, where the world’s largest iPhone assembly plant, belonging to Foxconn Technology, is located.

Faced with this situation, the “Global Times” assured today in an editorial that the Western media “deliberately exaggerate” the impact of China’s zero covid policy on the industry.

“These are temporary measures to resume production in a better way and make the economy and society work more effectively,” the newspaper said.

According to the accounts of the National Health Commission of China, since the beginning of the pandemic the country has added 178,764 infections and 4,638 deaths, the last two in March, which were the first deaths recorded in more than a year..

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