Published:June02,2022
By Zhou Wenting, Cao Chen and Ma Chi
Cross-river transportation resumed since Wednesday in Shanghai. [Photo by Gao Erqiang / chinadaily.com.cn]
Life returned to the streets of Shanghai on Wednesday as the city lifted most epidemic control measures in low-risk communities and allowed many businesses to resume operations.
People were evidently eager to get out onto the streets after a lockdown that spanned over two months, as many could be seen strolling at the city’s landmarks, including the Bund and the Pudong riverside, in the early morning.
The sounding of the famous bell tower at the Bund at midnight was joined by the sounds of car horns as drivers celebrated the new beginning.
Even before the new day started, police officers had removed isolation barriers between districts and all tunnels and bridges linking the two sides of the Huangpu River were opened.
The city’s public transportation system, including bus, metro and ferry services, has resumed full operations as well.
A man stretches his leg on the Bund, in front of buildings in the Lujiazui financial district, after the lockdown placed to curb the COVID-19 outbreak was lifted in Shanghai, June 1, 2022. [Photo/IC]
Xiong Xiong, the person in charge of the People’s Square metro station, one of the largest transfer stations in the city, said that peak passenger flow on Wednesday morning was about one third of the usual and the metro operation is smooth.
Many venues in the city now require visitors to show proof that they had undergone a nucleic acid test which returned negative within the 72 hours prior to entry.
According to Zhao Dandan, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, around 15,000 nucleic acid sampling sites, of which about 5,000 are accessible to the public, are currently operational in the city.
The city’s Party committee and the government on Wednesday expressed gratitude to those who have been involved in the latest fight against the virus in a public letter.
chinadaily.com.cn