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Coronavirus: Beijing shuts food market and goes into ‘wartime emergency mode’ after spike in COVID-19 cases
A district of Beijing is on a “wartime emergency” footing and tourism has been banned in the Chinese capital after a spike in coronavirus cases centred around a food market has sparked fears of a fresh outbreak.
The move comes amid mounting concern over a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Eleven neighbourhoods around the wholesale market in the city’s southwestern Fengtai district have gone into lockdown, where an official said it was in “wartime emergency mode”.
The cluster was detected after throat swabs from 45 people, out of 517 tested at the district’s Xinfadi market, proved positive for coronavirus, although none of them showed symptoms of COVID-19, according to the authorities.
Officials have said more than 10,000 people at the market will be tested, and the premises disinfected.
A city spokesman said all six COVID-19 patients confirmed in Beijing on Friday had visited the market.
They are the first locally transmitted cases in the city in more than 50 days.
Health officials in surrounding districts have also been asking residents whether they have visited the Xinfadi market.
The market was closed after someone, who had recently visited it, was reported to have been infected on Thursday.
As well as halting domestic tourism, sporting events have also been suspended in the city, while plans to reopen schools for some students have been dropped.
Pang Xinghuo, an official at the Beijing Centre for Disease Control, said: “Preliminary judgement suggests these cases may have come into contact with a contaminated environment in the market, or were infected after being in contact with infected people.
“We cannot rule out subsequent cases in the future.”
Sky’s Asia correspondent Siobhan Robbins said: “People in the area have been told not to leave their houses.
“It is a worrying time for Beijing because it hadn’t had a locally transmitted case for almost two months, so it just shows you how tricky COVID-19 is to keep under control, and Beijing isn’t taking any chances.
“Not only are these areas in lockdown, some schools and nurseries in the area were closed on Friday, several other markets have been shut as well.
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