Wuhan reopens after two-month lockdown
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Wuhan reopens after two-month lockdown

First inbound passenger train arrives, subway service resumes

People wearing face masks wait for a subway train on Saturday, the first day of service after a two-month closure in Wuhan. (Reuters Photo)
People wearing face masks wait for a subway train on Saturday, the first day of service after a two-month closure in Wuhan. (Reuters Photo)

WUHAN: Wuhan, the central Chinese city where the coronavirus first emerged last year, partly reopened on Saturday after more than two months of near total isolation for its population of 11 million.

The city in Hubei province was placed under lockdown in January with roadblocks ring-fencing its outskirts and drastic restrictions on daily life

But the major transport and industrial hub has now signalled the end of its long isolation, with state media showing the first officially sanctioned passenger train arriving back into the city just after midnight.

People are now allowed to enter but not leave, and many trains had been fully booked days in advance.

AFP reporters saw crowds of passengers arriving at Wuhan station on Saturday, most wheeling suitcases alongside them.

Some had managed to slip back into the city a day earlier on rail services that were stopping in Wuhan — but nominally banned passengers from disembarking — as enforcement of the travel ban began to ease.

One woman who arrived on Friday said she and her daughter had been away from her husband for nearly 10 weeks.

“As the train neared Wuhan, my child and I were both very excited,” the 36-year-old told AFP on Saturday.

“It felt like the train was moving faster than before, and my daughter said the driver must know we really want to go home.

“She rushed toward her father, and watching them from behind I couldn’t help but cry,” she added.

Staff at the Wuhan station were all clad in full protective gear with reception desks lined up ready to process returnees who had been overseas.

China is now battling to control a wave of imported cases as infections soar abroad.

As passengers lined up to exit the station Saturday — some wearing two face masks, gloves, face screens or full protective suits — a worker in a hazmat suit shouted for anyone returning from overseas to come forward.

All arrivals in Wuhan have to show a green code on a mobile app to prove that they are healthy.

Elsewhere in China, long lines of travellers queued at train stations to board high-speed services back to Wuhan.

Passengers in Shanghai had their temperatures checked by staff in goggles and masks after boarding their Saturday morning service.

Restrictions on residents heading out of Wuhan will not be lifted until April 8, when the airport will also reopen for domestic flights.

Wuhan is the last area of Hubei province to see overland travel restrictions lifted, although some highways leading into the city had already reopened this week.

Gao Xuesong, a worker in Wuhan’s auto industry, arrived in the city Friday night.

“It almost feels like returning to an alien land, because I haven’t been back for more than two months,” he told AFP.

Wuhan has paid a heavy price for the outbreak, with more than 50,000 people infected and more Covid-19 deaths than any other city in China.

But numbers have fallen dramatically in recent weeks. Official figures show there have been fewer than 20 new cases across the province in the past two weeks.

Most of Wuhan’s subway network restarted on Saturday, while some shopping centres will open their doors next week.

Banks reopened earlier this week and bus services resumed but residents have been warned against unnecessary travel and those over 65 have been told to avoid public transport.

A study this week found the lockdown in Wuhan succeeded in stopping the fast-spreading virus in its tracks and gave health care facilities crucial breathing room — but warned against opening up the city too soon.

More than 2,500 people are still in hospital with the disease in Wuhan, including nearly 900 “severe” cases.

Liu Dongru, of the Hubei Health Commission, said that although parts of Wuhan had been reclassified as “low-risk” areas, work to control the virus needed to continue.

“Zero reported cases does not equal zero risk,” he said.

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