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SHANGHAI: Millions of people in China’s financial hub were confined to their homes on Monday as the eastern half of Shanghai went into lockdown to curb the country’s biggest ongoing Covid-19 outbreak.

The move, announced late Sunday, caused a run on grocery stores by residents who have become increasingly exasperated with authorities’ inability to snuff out the outbreak despite nearly three weeks of increasingly disruptive measures.

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Authorities are imposing a two-phase lockdown of the city of around 25 million people to carry out mass testing.

The government had sought to avoid the hard lockdowns regularly deployed in other Chinese cities, opting instead for rolling localised lockdowns to keep Shanghai’s economy running.

But Shanghai has in recent weeks become China’s Covid hotspot, and on Monday another record high was reported, with 3,500 new confirmed cases in the city.

The area locked down on Monday is the sprawling eastern district known as Pudong, which includes the main international airport and glittering financial centre.

The lockdown will last until Friday, then switch to the more populated western Puxi section that includes the historic Bund riverfront.

The government said the steps were being taken to root out infections “as soon as possible”.

The unpredictable neighbourhood-level measures employed in recent weeks have left many citizens frustrated with repeated brief confinements at home.

Some complained Monday that only several hours’ notice was given for the new, larger lockdown.

“We really don’t understand Shanghai’s management and control measures. There has indeed been some inconsistency,” said a 59-year-old man who gave only his surname Cao, as he queued to buy groceries.

“After so much time, (the city) is not controlling the virus and the numbers are still going up.”

The government has not specified any impact on Shanghai’s main international airport or its bustling seaport.

‘Fight for food’

China largely kept the virus under control for the past two years through strict zero-tolerance measures including mass lockdowns of cities and provinces for even small numbers of cases.

But Omicron has proven harder to stamp out.

China has reported several thousand new daily cases for the past two weeks.

Those numbers remain insignificant globally but are up sharply from fewer than 100 a day in February.

Tens of millions of residents in affected areas across China have been subjected to citywide lockdowns in response.

But as Shanghai has struggled, some cities have made progress.

The southern tech manufacturing hub Shenzhen – which locked down earlier in the current outbreak – announced that normal business activity was resuming on Monday as new cases have dropped.

One Shanghai resident complained on the popular Weibo microblog of being in and out of neighbourhood lockdowns several times recently.

“Now even peoples’ basic livelihood has become a problem. Those who aren’t locked down fight for food, and those are sit up all night trying to order food on apps,” the post said.

Some posts complained of the impact on elderly residents who may not know how to order online, while others accused Shanghai – which is envied by other cities for its wealth and cosmopolitan image – of putting its desire to maintain normality over health concerns.

Chinese authorities have watched nervously as a deadly Hong Kong Omicron surge sparked panic buying and claimed a high toll of unvaccinated elderly in the southern Chinese city before creeping into mainland China.

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