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Reuters
Reuters
Health

More than 12 million in Shanghai can leave homes as COVID risk ebbs

Workers in protective suits are seen at a residential area during lockdown, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Shanghai, China, April 28, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song

As many as 12.38 million Shanghai residents, nearly half the population of China's financial hub, are now in lower-risk areas, meaning they can leave their homes, the government said on Friday.

Shanghai, battling China's biggest ever COVID-19 outbreak, put the entire city into lockdown at the beginning of the month, though it has cautiously lifted some restrictions on residential areas that have gone two weeks without a positive case.

The city classifies each housing unit according to three levels of risk, designating those that have not seen a COVID-19 positive case for 14 days as "prevention zones", allowing residents to go out for "appropriate" activities.

FILE PHOTO: An isolation facility waits to be lifted at the construction site of a centralised quarantine facility in a basketball park, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Shanghai, China April 28, 2022. cnsphoto via REUTERS

By Thursday, the number of people living in high-risk "sealed and controlled zones", subject to the strictest lockdown measures, was 5.27 million, down by 6.6 million since the last readjustment on April 20.

"The number of people in the sealed and controlled zones has clearly fallen," Zhao Dandan, deputy director of Shanghai's health commission, told a media briefing.

Another 5.93 million medium-risk residents are now allowed, in principle, to leave their apartments but are still confined to their compounds.

The government said 52 people died of COVID-19 on April 28, up from 47 a day earlier. Their average age was 84.

The city reported 9,545 new asymptomatic cases on Thursday, up from 9,330 a day earlier, with symptomatic cases also surging to 5,487, from 1,292 the previous day.

The coronavirus first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019 and for the next two years authorities managed to keep outbreaks largely under control with lockdowns and travel bans.

But this year the fast-spreading Omicron variant has tested China's "zero-COVID" policy.

(Reporting by David Stanway and Wang Yifan; Editing by Jacqueline Wong, Robert Birsel)

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