The Japan Times - Jubilant Chinese plan trips as inbound Covid quarantine set to end

EUR -
AED 4.301369
AFN 72.61664
ALL 95.571751
AMD 431.753162
ANG 2.097054
AOA 1075.195968
ARS 1630.356139
AUD 1.615523
AWG 2.109692
AZN 1.989761
BAM 1.955671
BBD 2.358985
BDT 143.770526
BGN 1.955873
BHD 0.441849
BIF 3485.018135
BMD 1.171238
BND 1.490489
BOB 8.093709
BRL 5.886877
BSD 1.171243
BTN 112.033661
BWP 15.778432
BYN 3.263657
BYR 22956.261284
BZD 2.355625
CAD 1.605545
CDF 2624.743572
CHF 0.915773
CLF 0.0264
CLP 1039.02867
CNY 7.953817
CNH 7.948301
COP 4442.235669
CRC 533.173971
CUC 1.171238
CUP 31.037802
CVE 110.623175
CZK 24.331119
DJF 208.152658
DKK 7.473949
DOP 69.396024
DZD 155.171775
EGP 61.983428
ERN 17.568567
ETB 184.323544
FJD 2.582755
FKP 0.86579
GBP 0.866072
GEL 3.139163
GGP 0.86579
GHS 13.239874
GIP 0.86579
GMD 85.500625
GNF 10280.538227
GTQ 8.935411
GYD 245.040129
HKD 9.171847
HNL 31.166938
HRK 7.534101
HTG 152.965144
HUF 358.447383
IDR 20497.715975
ILS 3.409116
IMP 0.86579
INR 112.174484
IQD 1534.321545
IRR 1537835.258793
ISK 143.628715
JEP 0.86579
JMD 185.232259
JOD 0.830423
JPY 185.033285
KES 151.300243
KGS 102.42502
KHR 4697.834644
KMF 493.091385
KPW 1054.133717
KRW 1748.330392
KWD 0.361034
KYD 0.976065
KZT 549.719082
LAK 25708.670405
LBP 105119.549576
LKR 380.121443
LRD 214.512526
LSL 19.220345
LTL 3.458361
LVL 0.70847
LYD 7.40808
MAD 10.744643
MDL 20.087277
MGA 4889.917874
MKD 61.62673
MMK 2458.760711
MNT 4192.649925
MOP 9.44796
MRU 46.849839
MUR 54.825636
MVR 18.049315
MWK 2039.711853
MXN 20.114311
MYR 4.602378
MZN 74.831569
NAD 19.219795
NGN 1605.18286
NIO 42.990287
NOK 10.746096
NPR 179.260544
NZD 1.975516
OMR 0.450344
PAB 1.171263
PEN 4.015592
PGK 5.106538
PHP 72.036981
PKR 326.312866
PLN 4.248664
PYG 7162.528021
QAR 4.267406
RON 5.208725
RSD 117.422465
RUB 86.872914
RWF 1710.007218
SAR 4.401596
SBD 9.407684
SCR 16.32793
SDG 703.328487
SEK 10.926384
SGD 1.490669
SHP 0.874447
SLE 28.810289
SLL 24560.273944
SOS 669.367056
SRD 43.563074
STD 24242.258167
STN 24.888804
SVC 10.248325
SYP 129.514263
SZL 19.307805
THB 37.889502
TJS 10.968658
TMT 4.111045
TND 3.373744
TOP 2.820059
TRY 53.21226
TTD 7.946612
TWD 36.922685
TZS 3042.466155
UAH 51.504267
UGX 4391.785595
USD 1.171238
UYU 46.527729
UZS 14146.21033
VES 595.064556
VND 30862.702192
VUV 138.181319
WST 3.165549
XAF 655.930578
XAG 0.013484
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.165328
XCG 2.110843
XDR 0.813974
XOF 654.135719
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.486648
ZAR 19.236545
ZMK 10542.544236
ZMW 22.107204
ZWL 377.1381
  • BCC

    -0.9500

    66.98

    -1.42%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.56

    -0.17%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    16.03

    -1.06%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2100

    60.79

    -0.35%

  • NGG

    -0.2600

    86.98

    -0.3%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.05

    -0.26%

  • GSK

    0.0900

    50.99

    +0.18%

  • RIO

    2.5400

    112.04

    +2.27%

  • BCE

    -0.0800

    24.39

    -0.33%

  • RELX

    -1.1500

    31.62

    -3.64%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.13

    -0.08%

  • VOD

    0.4150

    15.51

    +2.68%

  • BP

    -0.2600

    44.14

    -0.59%

  • AZN

    3.1800

    187.72

    +1.69%

  • BTI

    1.7100

    65.35

    +2.62%

Jubilant Chinese plan trips as inbound Covid quarantine set to end
Jubilant Chinese plan trips as inbound Covid quarantine set to end / Photo: HECTOR RETAMAL - AFP/File

Jubilant Chinese plan trips as inbound Covid quarantine set to end

People in China reacted with joy and rushed to book flights overseas Tuesday after Beijing said it would scrap mandatory Covid quarantine for overseas arrivals, ending almost three years of self-imposed isolation.

Text size:

In a snap move late Monday, China said from January 8 inbound travellers would no longer be required to quarantine on arrival in a further unwinding of hardline coronavirus controls that had torpedoed its economy and sparked nationwide protests.

Cases have surged nationwide as key pillars of the containment policy have fallen away, with authorities acknowledging the outbreak is "impossible" to track and doing away with much-maligned official case tallies.

Beijing also narrowed the criteria by which Covid fatalities are counted last week, a move experts said would suppress the number of deaths attributable to the virus.

Still, Chinese social media users reacted with joy to the end of restrictions that have kept the country largely closed off to the outside world since March 2020.

One top-voted comment on the Weibo platform proclaimed: "It's over... spring is coming."

"Preparing for my trip abroad!" wrote another user of the Twitter-like site. A third wrote: "I hope the price of the return ticket doesn't rise again!"

Online searches for flights abroad surged on the news, with travel platform Tongcheng seeing an 850 percent jump in searches and a tenfold jump in enquiries about visas, according to state media reports.

Rival platform Trip.com Group said the volume of searches for popular overseas destinations rose by 10 times year-on-year within half an hour of the announcement. Users were particularly keen on trips to Macau, Hong Kong, Japan, Thailand and South Korea.

The announcement effectively brought the curtain down on a zero-Covid regime of mass testing, strict lockdowns and long quarantines that has roiled supply chains and buffeted business engagement with the world's second-largest economy.

"The overwhelming view is just relief," said Tom Simpson, managing director for China at the China-Britain Business Council. "It brings an end to three years of very significant disruption."

An uptick in international trade missions is now expected for next year, he told AFP, although the full resumption of business operations is likely to be "gradual" as airlines slowly bring more flights online and companies tweak their China strategies for 2023.

Nonetheless, the announcement was "very, very welcome", Simpson said.

- 'Protect themselves' -

All passengers arriving in China have had to undergo mandatory centralised quarantine since March 2020. That decreased from three weeks to one week this summer, and to five days last month.

The end of those rules in January will also see Covid-19 downgraded to a Class B infectious disease from Class A, a formal distinction that allows authorities to adopt looser controls.

Some entry restrictions remain in place, with China largely suspending the issuance of visas for overseas tourists and students since the start of the pandemic.

Officials in several major cities have said hundreds of thousands of people are estimated to have been infected in the vast new wave in recent weeks.

Beijing's National Health Commission (NHC) said Saturday it would no longer publish daily case figures that had been criticised for failing to reflect the severity of outbreaks.

The winter case surge comes ahead of two major public holidays next month, in which millions of people are expected to travel to their hometowns to reunite with relatives.

Hospitals and crematoriums across the country have been overflowing with Covid patients and victims, with studies estimating around one million people could die over the next few months.

Major cities are grappling with shortages of medicine, while emergency medical facilities are strained by an influx of under-vaccinated elderly patients.

Beijing has insisted the country is prepared to weather the storm and has urged people to take responsibility for their own health.

"We need the public to properly protect themselves, continue to cooperate with the implementation of relevant prevention and control measures," said Liang Wannian, the head of an expert group at the NHC tasked with responding to the Covid-19 pandemic.

"We need to shift the focus of our work from infection prevention and control to medical treatment," he told state news agency Xinhua.

K.Yoshida--JT