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China reaching disturbing new low in pursuit of Covid-zero

A disgusting act of savagery has been caught on video in China where authorities are chasing a dream of defeating Covid-19. Warning: Disturbing

China's brutal lockdown is worsening as pets carried away from owners to slaughter

China’s unending pursuit of a policy to keep Covid-19 from spreading through its population has reached worrying new lows with a video that will make blood boil.

Shanghai, China’s main financial hub, is in the midst of its worst spike in cases since 2020.

Local authorities have introduced a raft of new measures including locking down residents and preventing them from leaving home for water and groceries.

Social gatherings are absolutely out of the question.

The rules have made headlines around the world, where almost every other nation has long ago given up on any attempt to suppress the virus.

But a new video appears to show China is taking things to a disturbing extreme.

Months after it was reported that authorities were killing hamsters out of fear they could spread the virus, China is now reportedly slaughtering cats and dogs.

A video from Shanghai on Tuesday shows bags full of cats on their way to slaughter because their owners have reportedly been infected with Covid-19.

Cats in bags bound for slaughter in China.
Cats in bags bound for slaughter in China.

The animals are packed tightly into mesh bags and laid on the footpath for collection.

It follows news from November last year that a health worker was sacked for beating a dog to death.

The BBC reported that the incident took place in Shangrao in Jiangxi province, where the worker was disinfecting a woman’s apartment.

It purportedly showed the worker bashing the animal with a crowbar.

The video comes as Shanghai recorded seven Covid-19 deaths on Wednesday, raising the toll in the city to 17 fatalities as authorities struggled to rein in infections despite a gruelling, weeks-long lockdown. The real toll is widely thought to be higher than China’s official death count.

The fast-spreading Omicron coronavirus variant has driven a huge spike in cases in the metropolis of 25 million people, and the government has imposed tight movement restrictions and multiple rounds of mass testing to combat the outbreak.

The lockdown has taken a heavy social and economic toll, with residents voicing their fury on social media over food shortages and lack of access to non-Covid medical care.

The seven newly reported deaths were cases with underlying conditions such as lung cancer and diabetes, city authorities said. Five of the patients were people over the age of 70.

The patients “became severely ill after admission to hospital, and died after ineffective rescue efforts, with the direct cause of death being underlying disease,” the Shanghai government said in a statement.

The city reported more than 18,000 new and mostly asymptomatic coronavirus cases on Wednesday.

More than 400,000 infections have been reported in Shanghai since March, and the city reported its first Covid deaths on Monday.

The official death toll remains low compared with the reported cases, but some have cast doubt on these figures, pointing to the low vaccination rate in China’s vast elderly population.

By comparison, Hong Kong — which also has a high number of unvaccinated elderly — has recorded nearly 9,000 deaths out of 1.18 million known cases since Omicron surged there in January.

A worker wearing personal protective equipment waits while residents undergo a health screening in Shanghai on April 19, 2022. Picture: Hector Retamal / AFP
A worker wearing personal protective equipment waits while residents undergo a health screening in Shanghai on April 19, 2022. Picture: Hector Retamal / AFP

Beijing insists its zero-Covid policy of hard lockdowns, mass testing and lengthy quarantines has averted fatalities and the public health crises seen in many other parts of the world.

But the latest lockdowns have clogged supply chains, forcing businesses to halt production.

Authorities have called for a “white list” of key industries and companies to be drawn up so production can continue, with more than 600 firms identified for early work resumption in Shanghai.

US electric car giant Tesla “officially resumed production” on Tuesday, state media reported, after suspending work at its “gigafactory” in the city for more than 20 days.

The resumption will happen in a “closed-loop system”, however, with staff sleeping on site and being tested for Covid, Bloomberg News reported.

with AFP

Read related topics:China

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/world/coronavirus/global/china-reaching-disturbing-new-low-in-pursuit-of-covidzero/news-story/99d6553f5c66f69dcb5b9a15d5c998a4