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Sunday, January 9, 2022 Vol. 17 No. 93
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AT COVID’S ‘GROUND ZERO’ For OFWs in China, a single virus case is just one too many
VEHICLES move past along quiet roads in Xi’an in northwestern China’s Shaanxi Province, December 26, 2021. TAO MING/XINHUA VIA AP
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By Malou Talosig-Bartolome
OR two years now, it has become a part of the daily routine of Doris Deguilmo-Lauron, an overseas Filipino worker (OFW) in Wuhan City, China, to check on her smart mobile phone app if there is any case of Covid-19 infection reported in the bustling city where the first global Covid-19 case was detected. “This is the app which we check first thing in the morning if there are any new Covid cases or none at all. If that first line says zero, then we’re good. No problem. But if it’s not zero, we start to get worried,” the Lanao del Norte native told the BusinessMirror as she shared a screenshot of the app. Being in the epicenter during the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 was very traumatic for Deguilmo-Lauron and her two daughters. She said at first, she felt they were prepared to remain in isolation on the 19th floor of their condominium residence because they have stocked up on food supplies that could last for three months. But on their 10th day of isolation, the negative psychological effect started to wear them down. “In the morning, when we looked down the building, there are literally no people in the streets. My kids said, ‘Are we the only ones who survived?’ Then when nighttime comes, we saw lights lit across houses and buildings. That’s when we get an assurance, ‘Ahh okay, there are still people alive,’” Deguilmo-Lauron recalled. For weeks, she said they have to endure strict lockdown. They would have wanted to stay longer, but her family in the Philippines is worried for her and her children. Philippine Consulate officials called her to join the repatriation flight to the Philip-
pines in March 2020. With just a suitcase at hand, Deguilmo-Lauron and her two children were flown to Clark, Pampanga. On April 8, Wuhan lifted its 76day draconian lockdown and started easing restrictions. A megacity with over 11 million people—one million less than the population of Metro Manila—Wuhan opened its borders, trains and flights resumed. Deguilmo-Lauron, who teaches English as Secondary Language (ESL) for elementary and middle school students at an international school, said when face-to-face classes resumed, her employer brought her and her entire family back to Wuhan at a steep price of P1.4 million. One-way ticket already cost more than P200,000 per passenger, and they had to undergo 14-day quarantine at a hotel with swab tests almost every day. Wuhan residents like her wouldn’t dream for anyone to have the kind of experience that they go through, much more for them to relive it. So they saw the value of being compliant with government health protocols.
Usual ‘routine’
“IF there are three confirmed Covid-19 cases, we have to prepare for mass testing, especially if the infected were just a few kilometers away where we are staying,” she
PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 51.1310
shared. Just like last August 2021, there were two cases reported in a construction site near the condominium where they are staying. So all Wuhan residents were required to undergo nucleic acid testing—twice in a week. Good thing, she said, there is no resistance to mandatory testing among Chinese and expat residents. “Even if they had to line up under the sun, there are no complaints. They said that’s the only thing they can contribute to society—to get tested—for the safety of everyone,” she added. Those who were tested positive are brought to hospitals where they are monitored and treated if they developed symptoms. Sharon Dy-Fajardo, a senior laboratory technician at a school in Beijing, said she also witnessed how fast Chinese authorities were able to develop health protocols, which she claimed are “backed by research and science.” “Total lockdown is implemented in areas with infection. No persons are allowed to leave and enter an area without proper documentation. They keep tabs of people’s temperature at every entry point, nucleic acid testing are being done in several communities at one go—even to the point that people taking the test and doing the test have to stay till everyone in a designated area has been tested. Anybody found to be positive for the virus has to go to a quarantine facility together with the close contacts the afflicted person came into contact with,” she said. Facemasks were still required to be worn when they go outside their homes. Eventually, Chinese and foreigners, even at age 12 years and below, were vaccinated with Chinese homegrown shots Sinopharm or Sinovac. A mandatory smartphone app embedded in the WeChat with color coding of their health condition and vaccination status also monitors their health and becomes their pass to shopping malls, workplaces and schools and other public areas. It has become an effective digital contact-
IN this April 13, 2020, file photo, a resident walks through a partially closed retail street with a bronze statue covered with a face mask in Wuhan in central China’s Hubei province. AP/NG HAN GUAN
tracing tool for their public health managers. Practically the entire China mainland is still closed from the rest of the world, except for certain cases where international flights and international ships were allowed. Elsewhere in China, sporadic cases of Covid-19 were reported. But generally, the second-largest economy of the world has achieved what epidemiologists coined as “flattening of the epidemiological curve.” From a peak of 6,905 new cases per day in February 2020, China recorded only 63 cases on April 8, 2020, when Wuhan lifted its lockdown. Since the pandemic began, China reported 103,000 cases with 4,636 deaths—97 percent of which were from Wuhan.
‘Questionable’ figures?
A NUMBER of experts outside China are questioning, though, the figures being released by Chinese authorities. But OFWs in China believed they reflect the reality on the ground. Richard Orozco, also an ESL teacher in an international school in Suzhou City in southern China, said if there were underreporting of Covid infection cases, they would have felt it because Chinese authorities would immediately order the shutdown of businesses.
Dy-Fajardo said she doesn’t rely on data released by Chinese authorities. She also monitors the data from different sources like the United Nations and other agencies from other countries and analyzes the trends or the extent of the infection. But what is really noteworthy, Orozco said, is that there is “fear” among people of authorities, unlike in the Philippines where people can just get away with infractions on health protocols. Charlene “Cheche” Chavez, operations manager of a Vietnamese restaurant in Beijing, shared the same view. “When Chinese authorities order a lockdown, you have to follow. Or they ordered testing and immunization, you have to follow. You have no choice. Or else, they can close your business anytime. If the health code in your app says you are not vaccinated or you broke quarantine [rules], you cannot enter the mall,” Chavez, who oversees the operations of 15 restaurants of the Vietnamese chain Saigon Mama in Beijing and Shanghai, said. Chinese authorities also launched a massive crackdown on illegal workers last year, and she learned of 22 Filipino domestic helpers being deported for skirting immigration restrictions by passing through Macau, another Chinese territory that doesn’t require
visas. Domestic helpers in China are paid RMB12,000-RMB15,000 (P90,000-P115,000) by the Chinese elite, she revealed. That is why it was surprising that Xi’an, another megacity in southwestern China with a 13 million population, experienced a community outbreak linked to the Delta variant in December 2021 after 250 cases were reported. Even the most authoritarian zero-Covid policy had a leak. A citywide lockdown was imposed starting December 22. Several top city officials were fired, and the city’s big data bureau chief suspended. Despite its self-imposed economic isolation from the rest of the world, China emerged as the only country in the world with a positive growth of real gross domestic product (GDP) to about 2.3 percent in 2020. World Bank’s initial projection of real GDP growth for 2021 was 8.0 percent. But Goldman Sachs estimates that the Xi’an outbreak will contribute to the downside of Xi’an lockdown as well as the effects of Omicron global outbreak to China. With consumer spending and supply shocks dragging down the economy, all eyes are on the dragon on how long it can sustain the zero-Covid policy. For Chavez, the lockdowns are just part of staying in business, and she feels the Chinese can still take the bitter pill. “Our lives are normal now here in China as long as we follow the rules,” Chavez said. Her restaurant, she said, has been hosting a lot of parties for Filipino communities for the past months. As for job opportunities for fellow kababayans, there will always be demand especially for English teachers, but it would still be difficult to be deployed there because of flight restrictions going to China. Because of these travel curbs , they could not even go to the Philippines for vacation for fear of being locked out. “Besides, it looks like our family is safer here in China rather than if we go back there to the Philippines,” Deguilmo-Lauron said.
n JAPAN 0.4415 n UK 69.2058 n HK 6.5547 n CHINA 8.0105 n SINGAPORE 37.5825 n AUSTRALIA 36.6098 n EU 57.7525 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.6193
Source: BSP (January 7, 2022)