People in Beijing and across China are donning masks, spraying antiseptic and staying off the streets in a battle to halt the spread of a viral outbreak (AFP Photo/ NICOLAS ASFOURI) |
Beijing (AFP) - At a deserted restaurant in China's capital, one black-and-white sign stands out among colourful the decor and neon signs advertising braised meat dishes: "this store has been disinfected today."
People in
Beijing and across China are donning masks, spraying antiseptic and staying off
the streets in a battle to halt the spread of a viral outbreak that has killed
more than 130 people nationwide and gripped the country with fear of getting
sick.
Authorities
are disinfecting trains and planes while people are encouraged to stay home
during the Lunar New Year holiday or wear masks if they go out.
Businesses
like the Hao Lu Wei braised meat restaurant, located in an eerily quiet mall in
central Beijing, are scrubbing their facilities to reassure wary customers.
Many others have just remained shut.
"Please
be assured while shopping that our store has been comprehensively disinfected,
and have a Happy New Year!" read a sign in the window of a glasses store,
devoid of patrons.
The capital
of 20 million people is normally quiet around the holiday as migrant workers
return home to visit family, but news of the rapidly spreading infection has
left malls and boulevards exceptionally silent.
Anxious shoppers desperate to protect themselves from infection have stripped stores of hand sanitisers.
Businesses
in Beijing are scrubbing their facilities to reassure wary customers,
while
many others have just remained shut (AFP Photo/NICOLAS ASFOURI)
|
Anxious shoppers desperate to protect themselves from infection have stripped stores of hand sanitisers.
"There
has been nothing since before the New Year," said Li, a 35-year-old
pharmacist clad in a thick face mask, turning away a delivery driver looking to
fetch rubbing alcohol on behalf of a customer waiting at home.
Health
workers in hazmat suits have set up screening checkpoints at subway station
entrances, while officers at one police station forbade entry without
temperature checks.
Some
residential buildings are checking the temperatures of visitors.
Only a
handful of patrons milled through the upscale Taikoo Li shopping centre on
Tuesday, as security staff posted signs urging shoppers to cover their faces
and the smell of disinfectant hung thick in the air.
Southern
Guangdong province, which has 110 million people, ordered residents to wear
face masks in public.
Other local
governments have issued similar edicts across the country, prompting
authorities to rush to ensure factories can churn out more masks.
Even more drastic measures have been taken in Wuhan, the industrial city in central China where the new coronavirus outbreak was first detected.
Several
local governments have ordered citizens to wear masks in public,
prompting
authorities to rush to ensure factories can churn out more masks
(AFP
Photo/NICOLAS ASFOURI)
|
Even more drastic measures have been taken in Wuhan, the industrial city in central China where the new coronavirus outbreak was first detected.
It -- and
several neighbouring cities in Hubei province -- have been almost completely
sealed off, with authorities grounding flights, halting trains and banning car
travel for more than 50 million people.
'We try
to stay home'
Some in
China have coped with the boredom of being confined to their homes through wry
social media posts.
One video
circulating on the messaging app WeChat shows a group of middle-aged men and
women playing mahjong while wearing masks -- and transparent plastic bags
covering their heads.
A popular
meme shared on the platform, as well as other social media networks, shows a
well-known dinner scene from "My Fair Princess" -- a popular 1990s TV
costume drama -- with surgical masks photoshopped onto the actors' faces.
In another
widely circulated image, a man protects himself from the virus by wearing two
surgical masks covering his entire face, with holes cut out for his eyes.
The city is
normally quiet around the Lunar New Year holiday but news of the
rapidly
spreading infection has left malls and boulevards exceptionally silent
(AFP
Photo/NICOLAS ASFOURI)
|
On the
streets of Beijing, not everyone has fallen victim to the anxiety sweeping the
country.
One couple
in their 30s stood on the street in the city's otherwise empty Sanlitun
entertainment district and removed their face masks to smoke cigarettes.
The man
carried several plush toys won from the claw machine games inside a nearby
arcade. He said he assumed the machines were being disinfected regularly, but
wasn't sure.
"We
came here because we don't know what else to do," the man, who asked not
to be named, told AFP.
"We
try to stay at home as much as possible."
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