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China: Camping Beds and Breakfast Bread for Shanghai Residents Quarantined

In one of the quarantine units in Shanghai, Covid-19-positive residents are lying on gray folding campaign beds less than a meter apart, with their suitcases and other personal items lying next to them.

A video released to Reuters today by a man living in the facility shows more than 100 people huddled on the floor of an office building, one of dozens of places the city has turned into quarantine centers in a battle to stop the spread. of the Omicron variant.

“This center is so crowded, people are less than a meter apart,” said the woman, who is over 60 and who shot the video she gave to Reuters.

The woman, who declined to be named, said there were at least 200 people in the unit, including small children, who shared four toilets. There are no showers and they are given plain bread for breakfast, she said.

“How is that okay?” He said.

The video shows these people spending their time playing games on their mobile phones or chatting.

According to the Chinese policy of ‘zero tolerance’ in COVID, whoever is positive must be quarantined in specific places.

Shanghai is strengthening this policy by turning schools, newly built apartment complexes and exhibition halls into quarantine centers, the largest of which can accommodate 50,000 people.

Authorities said last week they had set up more than 60 such facilities.

Authorities did not provide details on the number of people quarantined but the city has recorded more than 280,000 COVID infections since March.

While state-run media show hospitals with just two or three patients per room, people sent to Shanghai showrooms are standing side by side with thousands of others, with no partitions or showers and ceiling lights on 24 hours a day. .

To get out of quarantine, citizens must have two negative PCR tests.

The woman who gave the video stated that she moved there from a hotel unit in better conditions, where she stayed for about 20 days.

While he was there, he was found negative in the test he underwent but now he is afraid that he may get stuck again.

“There are people here who are positive, who cough and have a fever – how can you put the positives and the negatives together?” He asked.

Source: AMPE

Source: Capital

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