Beijing tightens rules for entering city after Omicron case
Beijing will require travelers to get a COVID-19 test within 72 hours of arrival in the Chinese capital, media announced on Sunday, a day after the city reported its first Omicron case and as it readies to stage the Winter Olympics next month.
According to the reports, on Saturday, the city reported the first local infection of the highly transmissible Omicron variant, involving a person who had visited multiple malls and restaurants in the previous 14 days. The person had not left the city since the start of this year.
The new rule, effective from Jan. 22 to end-March, is aimed to help with early detection of Omicron, which is surging globally, and the control of epidemic risks, Beijing Daily said on its official social media account.
Already, the capital city requires inbound travelers to take a COVID-19 test within 48 hours of departure for the city and have a green code on the city's health tracking app.
The city and neighboring Hebei province will host the Olympics, which start on Feb. 4, inside a "closed loop" separating athletes and other Games personnel from the general public.
In Tianjin, a neighboring city with close economic ties with the capital that battling a COVID-19 outbreak involving Omicron variant, the city found 59 COVID-19 cases in its third round of mass testing starting on Saturday, He Peng, a local government spokesman, told a press conference on Sunday.
So far, local cases of the Omicron variant have been detected in at least five provinces and municipalities, prompting cities to impose curbs to stop its spread and threatening to further undercut slowing economic growth.
China has not said how many Omicron cases it has detected in total.
About 13,000 people have been tested for COVID-19 in the Haidian district where the Beijing case was discovered, but none of the results came back positive, Beijing Daily cited official data as saying on Sunday.
Mainland China reported 119 new confirmed COVID-19 cases for Jan. 15, including imported infections, down from 165 a day earlier, according to National Health Commission (NHC) data on Sunday.
The new locally transmitted cases were in Tianjin, Henan, Beijing, Guangdong and Shaanxi, NHC said.
There were no new deaths, leaving the death toll at 4,636.
SS