Bangkok Post

One year on in Wuhan

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Exactly one year after it thrust the word “lockdown” into the global conversati­on, Wuhan passed the anniversar­y yesterday with a mix of pride at emerging from Covid-19’s grip and caution over a possible relapse.

A year ago Wuhan shocked the world by confining its 11 million anxious citizens to their homes, beginning a traumatic 76-day lockdown that underscore­d the growing threat of a mysterious pathogen emanating from the city.

At 10am that day, public transport was shut down and exiting the city was banned without special permission. An eery silence descended.

One by one, adjacent areas in hardhit Hubei province quickly followed suit, as did government­s worldwide as the coronaviru­s went global.

But while the world’s pandemic struggles continue, Wuhan today is nothing like the locked-down ghost town of a year ago, with traffic humming, sidewalks bustling, and citizens packing public transport and parks.

“I was frightened last year but things have improved a lot since the epidemic has been brought under control,” said a maskless jogger in his 20s who gave only his surname Wang, one of many people exercising under hazy skies along Wuhan’s Yangtze Riverfront yesterday. “Life is like before now.”

But memories of Wuhan’s ordeal remain fresh, especially as localised Covid-19 clusters multiply across China, prompting mass testing in Beijing and targeted lockdowns in other areas.

Huang Genben, 76, spent 67 days in hospital fighting Covid-19 last year, spitting up blood and expecting to die.

“When I closed my eyes at night I didn’t know if I would open them again,” Mr Huang told reporters.

Like many of his countrymen, he expresses pride at the “great efforts” made by China’s government and citizens to contain the pandemic, exemplifie­d by Wuhan.

The virus has killed at least two million people globally and continues to rage, but in China authoritie­s have reported fewer than 5,000 deaths, the vast majority coming in Wuhan at the pandemic’s outset.

And yesterday’s relaxed scenes — elderly dancers spinning in parks and crowded bars selling “Wuhan Stay Strong” craft beer — contrast with the rolling lockdowns, surging death rates and overwhelme­d hospitals in other countries.

“We can tell from the results that the policy of the government was correct, the cooperatio­n of (Wuhan) citizens was correct. I feel pain seeing the epidemic all over the world,” Mr Huang said.

The government has pushed an official propaganda narrative — starring Wuhan — focusing on a “heroic” Chinese response and recovery.

But there were no known lockdown commemorat­ions planned yesterday by Beijing, which remains tight-lipped on the pandemic’s early days amid accusation­s it tried to cover it up or mishandled the outbreak, allowing it to spread.

The virus is generally believed to have spread from a Wuhan wet market where exotic animals were sold as food.

But China has otherwise released little informatio­n on its origins, fuelling calls in the west for more transparen­cy.

The lockdown anniversar­y came as World Health Organizati­on experts are just days from completing a two-week quarantine in Wuhan before launching a planned investigat­ion into the the exact origins of the novel coronaviru­s.

The WHO said in a statement on Friday that it was too early to draw any conclusion­s as to whether the pandemic actually started in China or elsewhere.

 ??  ?? AN EERIE OCCASION:
A man sells balloons outside a shopping mall in Wuhan, China’s central Hubei province yesterday, one year after the city went into lockdown to curb the spread of the Covid-19 coronaviru­s.
AN EERIE OCCASION: A man sells balloons outside a shopping mall in Wuhan, China’s central Hubei province yesterday, one year after the city went into lockdown to curb the spread of the Covid-19 coronaviru­s.

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