China Mandates COVID-Zero Policy, Shenzhen People Desperate For Food By Nichole Hao of Epoch Times People waiting to have a nasal swab taken for nucleic acid testing for COVID-19 as it snows in Harbin, Heilongjiang Province on March 2. The Chinese regime continues to mandate its COVID-zero policy that quarantines all potential infections and locks down cities. Residents in Shenzhen, a city with multiple districts reporting outbreaks of COVID-19, complained that they were surrounded by βtrash mountainsβ and in desperate need of food due to the lockdown. βOn the evening of Feb. 28, a neighbor tried to jump off the building from his apartment. Other neighbors told me that heΒ has depression and hadnβt eaten for two days. He lost all hope and tried to commit suicide,β Lin Dai (pseudonym), a resident of Shangshadong village in the city of Shenzhen, told the Chinese-language Epoch Times on March 2. βAfter we were locked down at home, we couldnβt go out to buy food. I tried to order online, but it was very difficult to find food that can be delivered to us,β Lin said. βI know a young woman who lives in my building. She only has rice and pickles at home. She tries to eat as little as possible, and has eaten only one or two bowls of congee with pickles every day in the past days.β βWe continually called the authorities for help and were told they donβt have enough manpower to take care of the residents who are under lockdown,β Lin said. βFinally, the regime sent us milk and apples this morning and some fast food and vegetables at noon.β Chen Dong (pseudonym) is a new Shenzhen resident who drives a taxi in the city. On Feb. 22, Chen was locked down at his apartment in Shangshadong village. Since then, he hasnβt been able to work and canβt earn any money. βThe regime said that their staff members would send food to our doors, but the majority of the volunteers who bring the food donβt dare to come here. They are afraid of being infected,β Chen said. βIn the first days, we could go downstairs to pick up the food from the buildingβs front door.β The lives of Chen and his neighbors became worse on Feb 26, when the regime suddenly wouldnβt allow them to leave their apartments. βThey locked our building, didnβt send us anything, and didnβt remove the trash. Now, the trash is everywhere and piled like mountains,β Chen said. βNobody takes care of us, and many people shouted from their windows that they were hungry and needed food.β On March 1, Chen and his neighbors received the first batch of food, which Chen didnβt think was sufficient for a family. βWe have no other solution. If a family hasnβt stocked up food, and there are children, they will die of hunger. We went upstairs and downstairs to check on our neighbors. We are helping each other,β Chen said. People line to undergo swabbing for a nucleic acid test for the COVID-19 as it snows in Harbin in Chinaβs northeastern Heilongjiang Province on Mar. 2, 2022. (STR/AFP via Getty Images) Li Fei (pseudonym), a regime clerk at Shatou community in Shenzhen, told the Chinese-language Epoch Times on March 2 that the regime sealed the residential buildings and compounds where new infections were reported using barbed wire. βWe donβt allow any resident to escape from the sealed area.β Li said that about 60,000 to 70,000 people live at Shangsha village in the community and all are locked in their homes. Mass Testing Like other Chinese cities, the Shenzhen authorities mandated that all residents in the city must have a COVID-19 test every three days. On March 2, the regime announced that people arenβt allowed to take the metro if they donβt have a negative COVID-19 test result within 48 hours. Inside residential compounds, speakers continually broadcast: βYour health code will turn to yellow if you havenβt been tested in the past 72 hoursβ and βYou canβt go to work tomorrow if you donβt take a test today.β A resident surnamed Chen who lives at Shekou community in Nanshan district in Shenzhen said in a phone interview that she and the majority of Shenzhen residents work to earn money. βThe rule that people canβt work without a test, strangles our throats. Itβll be horrible if a Shenzhen resident canβt go to work,β Ms. Chen said. The Chinese regime doesnβt allow people to move without a cell phone app-generated health code. A green code means the owner can pass the checkpoints for public transportation, enter a building, or even go back home. A yellow code means the owner has to stay at home. A red code means the owner must be quarantined at a quarantine center. The nucleic acid tests in China are linked to each residentβs health code app. If the app hasnβt received a required test result, the code will show yellow. The system forces Chinese people to take the test. However, the mass testing was believed to be a breeding ground for COVID-19. βOn Feb. 22, the community clerks ordered us to take the nucleic acid test for COVID-19. We were crowded together and had to wait for over four hours,β Chen Dong said. βWe are required to be tested even now.β Residents line up to have a nasal swab taken that will be used for nucleic acid testing for COVID-19 in Wuhan, Hubei Province on Feb. 22, 2022. (STR/AFP via Getty Images) On March 3, the Shenzhen city regime announced at the daily press conference that new infections were reported in Futian, Luohu, Nanshan, Baoβan, and Yantian districts. On Thursday, Chinaβs national health commission announced new domestic infections were reported in Guangdong, Inner Mongolia, Hubei, Jilin, Shanghai, Guangxi, Tianjin, Hebei, Shanxi, Heilongjiang, Jiangsu, Sichuan, and Yunnan provinces. Tyler Durden Mon, 03/07/2022 – 04:00
China Mandates COVID-Zero Policy, Shenzhen People Desperate For Food
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